Light-as-a-Feather Nanomaterial Extracts Drinking Water From Air
9 Articles
9 Articles
Featherweight material tackles global water scarcity
An international team of scientists has created an exceptionally lightweight nanomaterial that can efficiently extract significant amounts of clean drinking water from moisture in the air.The nanomaterial, a calcium-enhanced graphene oxide aerogel, adsorbs
Light-as-a-feather nanomaterial extracts drinking water from air
An international scientific collaboration has developed a novel nanomaterial to efficiently harvest clean drinking water from water vapor in the air. The nanomaterial can hold more than three times its weight in water and can achieve this far quicker than existing commercial technologies, features that enable its potential in direct applications for producing potable water from the air.
More poetic than a desalinizer and more efficient than a net: this hybrid harp could change access to water around the world. Article Researchers have created a net that generates portable water, inspired by cloud traps appeared first on NeozOne.
How to produce drinking water from air: a revolution for the future against drought - Economic Scenarios
In a world where billions of people do not have access to clean water, science has made an extraordinary step forward: an international team of researchers, led by Nobel Prize winner Kostya Novoselov and Professor Rakesh Joshi , has developed a nanomaterial capable of extracting clean water directly from the humidity of the air . This technology, lightweight, efficient and energy-efficient, could change the fate of arid regions or regions withou…
3D nanotech blankets offer new path to clean drinking water
Columbus OH (SPX) Mar 26, 2025 Researchers have developed a new material that, by harnessing the power of sunlight, can clear water of dangerous pollutants. Created through a combination of soft chemistry gels and electrospinning - a technique where electrical force is applied to liquid to craft small fibers - the team constructed thin fiber-like strips of titanium dioxide (TiO2), a compound often utilized in solar cell
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