IIT Guwahati develop method to harvest drinking water from air

IIT Guwahati develop method to harvest drinking water from air

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Anupama Mehra
Assistant Manager – Content
New Delhi, Updated on Dec 9, 2020 09:23 IST

Leaves of plants like lotus are water repellent in nature due to the presence of a layer of trapped air between the leaf surface and the water droplet, which causes the droplet to slide off the leaf.

Researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Guwahati has developed novel materials that can efficiently harvest water from humid air. A team of researchers led by Dr Uttam Manna, Associate Professor, Chemistry Department and Centre of Nanotechnology, IIT Guwahati, has published the results of their work in the journal of The Royal Society of Chemistry. The other research scholars in the team are Mr Kousik Maji, Mr Avijit Das, and Ms Manideepa Dhar.

In a statement, the institute said that scientists around the world are trying to collect and conserve water through non-traditional methods.

"In regions of the world with naturally scanty rainfall, plants and insects have devised ingenious strategies to pull and collect water out of the air. Mimicking this, scientists worldwide are trying to build technologies that can pull out water from thin air. “Such water-harvesting techniques use the concept of hydrophobicity or water-repelling nature of some materials”, lead researcher Dr Manna said.

Leaves of plants like lotus are water repellent in nature due to the presence of a layer of trapped air between the leaf surface and the water droplet, which causes the droplet to slide off the leaf.

“However simple hydrophobicity such as this is unsuitable for water harvesting from highly humid environments because high moisture content can displace the trapped air and cause permanent damage,” an official statement said.

A team of researchers at the IIT Guwahati have mimicked the pitcher plant -- an insect-eating plant with a slippery surface.

The research team from IIT Guwahati has used the concept of chemically patterned SLIPS (Slippery Liquid-Infused Porous Surfaces) to effectively harvest water from moist air. The researchers produced a patterned hydrophilic SLIP by spraying a sponge-like porous polymeric material on top of a simple A4 printer paper.

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Anupama Mehra
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"The pen is mightier than the sword". Anupama totally believes in this and respects what she conveys through it. She is a vivid writer, who loves to write about education, lifestyle, and governance. She is a hardcor Read Full Bio
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