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Efficient Water Collection from Biodesigned and Natural Inclined Surfaces: Influence of Inclination Angle on Atmospheric Water Collection.

Edward Hingha FodayTaiwo SesayYagbasuah Maada BaionEmmanuel Bartholomew KoromaAlpha Yayah JallohKejan KokofeleFlorence Wuyah Baion
Published in: ACS omega (2022)
Water is one of the most important and crucial indicators of sustainable development goals (SDGs) for humans and other living organisms. Water demand has outstripped supply, resulting in shortage on a worldwide scale, particularly in arid regions. This water scarcity has impeded agricultural productivity and other developmental projects with the ongoing global warming and other anthropogenic activities making it more complicated. To address the worldwide water crisis, it is worthwhile to convert atmospheric air to drinking water. Sequel to that, a hydrophobic surface was designed using facile lithography to compare its water harvesting efficiency with a hydrophilic surface at different orientation angles. For the research, the hydrophobic designed surface is called biodesigned material, while the hydrophilic natural surface is a Mangifera indica leaf (MIL). It is against this background that we seek to investigate the most suitable orientation angle good for efficient water harvesting. To that end, a 60° inclination angle is the most efficacious orientation for water collection as it outperformed the 30 and 45° orientation angles. To minimize re-evaporation, absorption, suction, and other environmental challenges that impede efficient collection, atmospheric moisture should be collected immediately from functional surfaces.
Keyphrases
  • drinking water
  • climate change
  • public health
  • escherichia coli
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • ionic liquid
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • gold nanoparticles
  • quality improvement
  • global health
  • tandem mass spectrometry