The company’s “moonshot factory” is letting anyone build and tweak the design of its new atmospheric water harvester.
Last year, on the roof of a parking lot at Google’s headquarters, engineers from X—Alphabet’s “moonshot factory”—set up a panel to begin its first tests. The design, called an atmospheric water harvester, pulls in outside air, then uses fans and heat from sunlight to create condensation, producing clean drinking water drip by drip.
Because larger water infrastructure projects, like desalination plants, take many years to plan and build, the small devices could help fill the gap in the meantime. “This can leapfrog a lot of that and go directly to the source with a small device that’s solar powered,” says Jackson Lord, lead author of the paper, who previously worked at X on the project.
The X team works on multiple major challenges simultaneously, including new approaches to renewable energy and more sustainable ways to grow food. The team had tried to find ways to generate clean water multiple times, but only began focusing on atmospheric water harvesting after realizing that it could narrow its scope to think only about drinking water, not water used for other purposes. The project started in 2017.“One-tenth of 1% of the clean water in the world goes into our mouths,” says Astro Teller, the head of X. “The other 99.9% is for things like bathing and cleaning the dishes and agriculture and things like that. And all of that doesn’t have to be as clean…Once we had that perspective shift, all of the sudden solutions that hadn’t seemed plausible suddenly seemed plausible.”
Atmospheric water harvesting devices use a very large amount of energy to generate each liter of water, so the kind of simple, low-cost device the team developed could never produce enough water to meet every need. But, in many places, it can provide sufficient drinking water.
The device is designed to work off-grid, and eliminate every possible expense. It uses only a few solar photovoltaic cells to power its fans, and relies mostly on solar heat. (Some others, like a startup called Source, use a related design.) It has few parts. A fan pulls in outside air and a desiccant absorbs moisture from it. A second fan recirculates another stream of air heated by the solar collector. In the same way that dew naturally forms outside, when the warm air meets the cooler air inside the machine, drops of liquid form. The team’s prototype produced 150 milliliters of water per hour per square foot; a final device could likely produce five liters of water a day.
“We don’t always do this, but in this particular case, we felt like this had made enough of the right kinds of progress had enough of the right kinds of potential that sharing it with the rest of the world was actually going to get the benefits to the world faster than if we just kept it an X thing ourselves,” says Teller. “If we can accelerate the progress of delivering safe water in any way,” adds Lord, “we think that’s a worthy goal.”
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October 27, 2021 at 10:00PM
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