Jumping water droplets improve power-plant efficiency

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 ก.ย. 2024
  • The efficiency of most industrial plants depends crucially on water vapor condensing on metal plates or condensers, and how easily the condensed water can fall away allowing for more droplets to form. On a typical, flat-plate condenser, water vapor condenses to form a liquid film on the surface, drastically reducing the condenser's ability to collect more water, and ultimately acting as a barrier to heat transfer.
    By creating hydrophobic surfaces, either through chemical treatment or through surface patterning, researchers have been able to prevent this problem by encouraging water droplets to form and fall away. Now a team of MIT researchers have taken this process a step further by making surfaces that are patterned at multiple scales.
    A group from MIT's mechanical engineering department found that the energy, released as tiny droplets of water that merge to form larger ones, is enough to propel the droplets upward from the surface. The removal of droplets doesn't depend solely on gravity - droplets don't just fall from the surface - they actually JUMP away from it.
    Using this information, their new process produces a surface that resembles a bed of tiny, pointed leaves sticking up form the surface; these nanoscale points minimize contact between the droplets and the surface, making the release easier. After the leaflike pattern is created, a hydrophobic coating is applied using a solution that bonds itself to the patterned surface, without significantly altering its shape.
    This patterning can be made on a film that can be applied to a variety of surfaces, including the copper tubes and plates commonly used in commercial power plants. This technology could also be useful for other processes where heat transfer is important, such as in dehumidifiers, and for heating and cooling systems in buildings.
    Read more: mitne.ws/TNu26I
    Video: Melanie Gonick, MIT News
    Additional footage/still images: Nenad Miljkovic

ความคิดเห็น • 6

  • @bipas3
    @bipas3 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    Years ago I noticed how some species of tree leaf condensed water out of mist. I was reminded of it in a passage from, 'Jude the Obscure' by Thomas Hardy (Part 6 Chap 5):
    "The fog of the previous day or two had travelled up here by now and the trees on the green caught armfuls and turned them into showers of big drops."

  • @InventPeace1
    @InventPeace1 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    Where can we buy this in a spray on form? Fantastic ideas WTG MIT ! I was just looking for a hydrophobic spray like "Scotchguard" for furniture to spray on my condenser experiment, but this is way better obviously.

  • @pleabargain
    @pleabargain 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    I could see this tech having a big impact on multi-stage flash distillation (MSF)! Unfortunately, the video makes no mention of cost to produce or apply this material... Ideally it would be something that could be painted or sprayed on by a low skilled technician.

    • @pythonanimalia
      @pythonanimalia 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Replying this after 6 years lmao, You are absolutely right. If I am not wrong the problem is related to scaling up the fabrication of the superhydrophobic materials..what we are seeing is probably only 10 cm tube which has nanostructures over its surface...the cost, as well as time required to deploy this on a power plant level, would be significant. Correct me if I am wrong.

  • @curtisyoungberg8938
    @curtisyoungberg8938 10 ปีที่แล้ว

    Is it possible to have this film applied to both sides of large sheets of plastic? Would it also be possible to apply it to both sides of EPDM pond liner?

  • @nordost8888
    @nordost8888 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    охуенная тема...