Drinking Water From Air Humidity
by Ian W. Parker on June 10, 2009
Research scientists at the Fraunhofer Institute for Interfacial Engineering and Biotechnology IGB in Stuttgart working in conjunction with their colleagues from the company Logos Innovationen have found a way of converting this air humidity autonomously and decentrally into drinkable water. βThe process we have developed is based exclusively on renewable energy sources such as thermal solar collectors and photovoltaic cells, which makes this method completely energy-autonomous. It will therefore function in regions where there is no electrical infrastructure,β says Siegfried Egner, head of department at the IGB. The principle of the process is as follows: hygroscopic brine β saline solution which absorbs moisture β runs down a tower-shaped unit and absorbs water from the air. It is then sucked into a tank a few meters off the ground in which a vacuum prevails. Energy from solar collectors heats up the brine, which is diluted by the water it has absorbed.
(via sciencedaily.com)
Arrakis, here I come!

