Tuesday, July 22, 2025

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : Window-sized device taps the air for safe drinking water

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

Window-sized device taps the air for safe drinking water

MIT engineers developed an atmospheric water harvester that produces fresh water anywhere even Death Valley, California.


Today, 2.2 billion people in the world lack access to safe drinking water. In the United States, more than 46 million people experience water insecurity, living with either no running water or water that is unsafe to drink. The increasing need for drinking water is stretching traditional resources such as rivers, lakes, and reservoirs.


To improve access to safe and affordable drinking water, MIT engineers are tapping into an unconventional source: the air. The Earth’s atmosphere contains millions of billions of gallons of water in the form of vapor. If this vapor can be efficiently captured and condensed, it could supply clean drinking water in places where traditional water resources are inaccessible.


With that goal in mind, the MIT team has developed and tested a new atmospheric water harvester and shown that it efficiently captures water vapor and produces safe drinking water across a range of relative humidities, including dry desert air.


The new device is a black, window-sized vertical panel, made from a water-absorbent hydrogel material, enclosed in a glass chamber coated with a cooling layer. The hydrogel resembles black bubble wrap, with small dome-shaped structures that swell when the hydrogel soaks up water vapor. When the captured vapor evaporates, the domes shrink back down in an origami-like transformation. The evaporated vapor then condenses on the the glass, where it can flow down and out through a tube, as clean and drinkable water.


The system runs entirely on its own, without a power source, unlike other designs that require batteries, solar panels, or electricity from the grid. The team ran the device for over a week in Death Valley, California — the driest region in North America. Even in very low-humidity conditions, the device squeezed drinking water from the air at rates of up to 160 milliliters (about two-thirds of a cup) per day.


The team estimates that multiple vertical panels, set up in a small array, could passively supply a household with drinking water, even in arid desert environments. What’s more, the system’s water production should increase with humidity, supplying drinking water in temperate and tropical climates.

“We have built a meter-scale device that we hope to deploy in resource-limited regions, where even a solar cell is not very accessible,” says Xuanhe Zhao, the Uncas and Helen Whitaker Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Civil and Environmental Engineering at MIT. “It’s a test of feasibility in scaling up this water harvesting technology. Now people can build it even larger, or make it into parallel panels, to supply drinking water to people and achieve real impact.


Zhao and his colleagues present the details of the new water harvesting design in a paper appearing today in the journal Nature Water. The study’s lead author is former MIT postdoc “Will” Chang Liu, who is currently an assistant professor at the National University of Singapore (NUS). MIT co-authors include Xiao-Yun Yan, Shucong Li, and Bolei Deng, along with collaborators from multiple other institutions.


Carrying capacity

Hydrogels are soft, porous materials that are made mainly from water and a microscopic network of interconnecting polymer fibers. Zhao’s group at MIT has primarily explored the use of hydrogels in biomedical applications, including adhesive coatings for medical implants, soft and flexible electrodes, and noninvasive imaging stickers.


“Through our work with soft materials, one property we know very well is the way hydrogel is very good at absorbing water from air,” Zhao says.

Researchers are exploring a number of ways to harvest water vapor for drinking water. Among the most efficient so far are devices made from metal-organic frameworks, or MOFs — ultra-porous materials that have also been shown to capture water from dry desert air. But the MOFs do not swell or stretch when absorbing water, and are limited in vapor-carrying capacity.


Water from air

The group’s new hydrogel-based water harvester addresses another key problem in similar designs. Other groups have designed water harvesters out of micro- or nano-porous hydrogels. But the water produced from these designs can be salty, requiring additional filtering. Salt is a naturally absorbent material, and researchers embed salts — typically, lithium chloride — in hydrogel to increase the material’s water absorption. The drawback, however, is that this salt can leak out with the water when it is eventually collected.


The team’s new design significantly limits salt leakage. Within the hydrogel itself, they included an extra ingredient: glycerol, a liquid compound that naturally stabilizes salt, keeping it within the gel rather than letting it crystallize and leak out with the water. The hydrogel itself has a microstructure that lacks nanoscale pores, which further prevents salt from escaping the material. The salt levels in the water they collected were below the standard threshold for safe drinking water, and significantly below the levels produced by many other hydrogel-based designs.


In addition to tuning the hydrogel’s composition, the researchers made improvements to its form. Rather than keeping the gel as a flat sheet, they molded it into a pattern of small domes resembling bubble wrap, that act to increase the gel’s surface area, along with the amount of water vapor it can absorb.


The researchers fabricated a half-square-meter of hydrogel and encased the material in a window-like glass chamber. They coated the exterior of the chamber with a special polymer film, which helps to cool the glass and stimulates any water vapor in the hydrogel to evaporate and condense onto the glass. They installed a simple tubing system to collect the water as it flows down the glass.

In November 2023, the team traveled to Death Valley, California, and set up the device as a vertical panel. Over seven days, they took measurements as the hydrogel absorbed water vapor during the night (the time of day when water vapor in the desert is highest). In the daytime, with help from the sun, the harvested water evaporated out from the hydrogel and condensed onto the glass.

Over this period, the device worked across a range of humidities, from 21 to 88 percent, and produced between 57 and 161.5 milliliters of drinking water per day. Even in the driest conditions, the device harvested more water than other passive and some actively powered designs.

“This is just a proof-of-concept design, and there are a lot of things we can optimize,” Liu says. “For instance, we could have a multipanel design. And we’re working on a next generation of the material to further improve its intrinsic properties.


“We imagine that you could one day deploy an array of these panels, and the footprint is very small because they are all vertical,” says Zhao, who has plans to further test the panels in many resource-limited regions. “Then you could have many panels together, collecting water all the time, at household scale.

This work was supported, in part, by the MIT J-WAFS Water and Food Seed Grant, the MIT-Chinese University of Hong Kong collaborative research program, and the UM6P-MIT collaborative research program.


source :MIT News

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : Dyneema Launches New Fiber for Protective Gloves

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

Dyneema® Launches New Fiber for Protective Gloves, Initiating Paradigm Shift in Light-Weight, Comfort and Strength

Dyneema®, owned by #AvientCorporation, an innovator of materials solutions, today announces its third generation of Dyneema® Diamond fiber. Surpassing cut protection and light-weight performance of prior-generation fiber, the new material enables gloves to be made using a single yarn technology – delivering built-in cut resistance without the need for reinforcement yarns. The result is a significant enhancement of comfort, dexterity, and user safety. 

According to OSHA and the Bureau of Labor and Statistics 70% of workplace injuries result from unworn gloves. Dyneema® has been tackling this issue for over a decade through its market-leading Dyneema® Diamond fiber technology, which supports the creation of protective gear with unmatched strength, wearability, and reliability. This unyielding commitment to excellence has earned Dyneema® the trust of elite manufacturers in sectors, including automotive, medical, food, and heavy industry. With the new Dyneema® Diamond 3.0 fiber technology, the result of three years’ dedicated research, testing, and market research, Dyneema® raises the bar yet again, bringing unparalleled performance to industries where safety is non-negotiable. 


#Gloves made with #Dyneema® Diamond 3.0 are up to 40% lighter than those made with previous iterations of the fiber a game-changer for user comfort. It also delivers breakthrough improvements in worker safety, with 6 times higher cut resistance than gloves made from generic HPPE fiber, and a +2 cut level compared to previous generations of Dyneema® fiber. Further advantages over other fibers include improved coating adhesion, higher fiber integrity, plus touchscreen friendliness. This all-around performance has been verified by robust, comprehensive testing at dedicated facilities in Europe and Asia. The results are clear: no other tested material can match Dyneema® Diamond 3.0’s performance against all key criteria of glove performance. 


These superior fiber attributes are made possible by patent-protected technology unique to Dyneema®, by which raw ingredient polymer is molecularly engineered for unrivaled strength, then enhanced with cut-resistant microparticles spun directly into the polymer. This technique, made possible by pioneering science and a custom engineering process, delivers another crucial benefit: enabling protective gloves to be made with single yarn technology, with no need for additional reinforcement yarns to achieve cut resistance. This opens up greater design flexibility and allows producers to craft silky-smooth gloves that keep hands agile and dexterous throughout the working day. 


“Protective handwear needs to be so comfortable that users forget they’re wearing it,” explains Claudio Di Gregorio, Global Marketing Manager Mechanical Industrial for Dyneema®, Avient. “Third-generation Dyneema® Diamond fiber brings that ambition to life, providing outstanding cut performance on single yarn technology while reducing product weight by almost half. To workers in critical industries that keep the world moving, our message is simple: Dyneema® Diamond 3.0 puts the world’s strongest fiber™ in the palm of your hand. And it does so in a way that delivers reliable all-day wear.” 

As one of the world’s only backward-integrated HPPE producers, Dyneema® maintains complete control over every stage of the fiber manufacturing process, from raw material to polymer and fiber production. This vertical integration means quality and performance can be guaranteed at every stage, allowing glove manufacturers to consistently deliver a fiber with superior performance, comfort, and durability. 


Dyneema® Diamond 3.0 is a testament to the talent and enthusiasm of everyone involved,” concludes Di Gregorio. “Chasing improvements at every level, we’re delivering – and surpassing – what the market demands. This latest innovation proves that we’ve got the technologies needed to handle the protective challenges of the manufacturing workforce.”


source : Avient

UBE and amu Inc. Recycle Discarded Fishing Nets in Kesennuma to Make Uniforms for Sendai Umino-Mori Aquarium

UBE Corporation in collaboration with amu Inc. is advancing a project to #recycle #nylonfibers from discarded #fishingnets collected in Kesennuma City, Miyagi Prefecture. The company announced today that material developed through this joint initiative will be used to make the uniforms of the Sendai Umino-Mori Aquarium.


#UBE and #amu have leveraged their respective technological expertise and information networks to collect discarded fishing nets used in large-mesh drift gillnet fishing, a major fishing method off the Sanriku coast. Through a series of complex processes, the nets have been recycled into fabric.

UBE NYLON, manufactured and marketed by UBE, is used in a wide range of applications, including automotive parts, food packaging films, fishing nets, and fishing line. UBE recognizes the collection and recycling of discarded fishing gear, such as used nets, as a social responsibility of nylon suppliers, particularly in efforts to protect the marine environment. As part of its approach to addressing this challenge, UBE participated in the project to recycle nylon fibers from discarded fishing nets, which led to the material's adoption in this initiative.


Looking ahead, UBE will continue to strengthen its environmental initiatives. These efforts will focus not only on recycling used fishing nets but also on reducing pollution caused by various types of plastic waste, with the goal of contributing to environmental preservation.


source: UBE

Monday, July 21, 2025

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : Keeping the Trade secrets without patent

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

Unlike many commercial products, WD-40 was never patented. This wasn't an oversight—it was a strategic decision. By skipping a patent, the creators ensured that the formula wouldn’t be made public. Patents require full disclosure of ingredients and processes, and once they expire, competitors are free to duplicate the product.


WD-40’s makers chose long-term secrecy over temporary legal protection. This approach has worked for decades: though the product hit the market in 1958, its exact contents remain largely unknown. While some components like petroleum-based solvents are speculated, the full formulation is still locked in a vault at company headquarters.


This decision has also helped WD-40 develop a kind of mystique. Its versatility from loosening bolts to stopping squeaks to displacing moisture—is widely praised, yet its recipe remains out of reach. This kind of secrecy is rare in the chemical product industry, where patents are the norm.


The formula has been tested, reverse-engineered, and analyzed over the years, but no copy has gained the same traction. With no patent to read and no requirement to disclose more than the minimum for safety labeling, WD-40 remains one of the best-kept trade secrets in consumer goods.


source : CTTO / Regis W George III


#tradesecrets #brand

From idea to ocean: advanced manufactured travel surfboard set to make waves

Gowing Bros Limited (Gowings), an investment company, has identified a market opportunity for such a travel surfboard, planning to turn the vision into a reality in partnership with its brands Gowings Pacific Trader, FCS and Softech. This is an ambitious project under the Advanced Composite Materials Cooperative Research Centre initiative that has the potential to change the surfing industry by developing advanced manufacturing techniques for surfboards. The project focuses on enhancing the laminating quality while adapting automated processes of core shaping, composite material deposition and finishing. This will retain the high quality of the board while significantly reducing the costs of manufacturing, hence making it a win-win solution for both manufacturers and customers.


The vision and leadership

Gowings will lead the project management support and control over the design scope, drawing on critical information from markets to ensure that what will be realised in the final product meets the surfers’ needs today. They will oversee compliance and standards testing to ensure that the surfboard meets all necessary regulations and market expectations. In terms of board performance checking, Gowings will engage professional surf athletes for field trials, which will deliver valuable feedback for shaping the final design.


Gowings will be at the helm of the project, while UNSW Sydney will contribute specialist research. As lead research partner, University of South Wales (UNSW) will have a legitimate contribution towards the technology-informed design process in working out performance characteristics within the board for flex, damping, rebound and overall ‘feel’. It sets an objective to seek optimisation. Ultimately, the aim is for the surfboard designed not only to meet performance standards, but to exceed them.


Collaboration with University of Wollongong’s Surf Flex Lab

The vast research capabilities of the University of Wollongong’s (UOW) Surf Flex Lab will also be harnessed to cover all aspects of the surfing experience. It is expected that this proposed collaboration will marry cutting-edge scientific research with practical surfboard design in a product that is innovative yet highly functional. “These premium travel boards present a rather exciting opportunity for national and international markets with improved durability, performance and sustainability,” says John Gowing, the independent non-executive director of Gowings. “In other words, no more lugging around a full-size, heavy board for travelling surfers, including, potentially, our athletes.


source : ACM CRC/ JEC Composites

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : Composites Prepregs

 Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

📢 Time to get technical... 📢


When it comes to manufacturing high-performance composite parts, not all technologies play the same game. So where do prepregs stand on the field of performance vs. production volume? Let’s break it down. 👇


🎯Top-tier Performance:

Prepregs are the gold standard in high-performance composites. Think ultra-lightweight + heavy-duty strength , ideal for aerospace, motorsports, and other industries where failure is not an option.


But Here’s the Trade-Off: All that performance doesn’t come without a cost namely, lower productivity. If you're aiming for high-volume production, methods like RTM, resin infusion, short fiber processing or thermoplastics might suit you better.


So, When to Use Prepregs?⚙️

They shine brightest in small to medium production runs, where performance is king and the cost/performance balance still makes sense. Bonus: the processing is clean, safe, and straightforward a big plus in demanding environments.


Do you see prepregs evolving to meet higher volume demands or is their niche set in stone? Drop your thoughts below! 😎


📖 Reference: Composite Technology Prepregs and Monolithic Part Fabrication Technologies book, pg.11

source : The Native Lab

Friday, July 18, 2025

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : FDA's ban on palm leaf dinnerware

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

The US FDA's recent ban on palm leaf dinnerware raises important questions about how we approach the safety of plant-based products that come in contact with food. I'd love to hear your thoughts on this complex issue.


What happened: The FDA found that toxic alkaloids (including a known carcinogen) migrate from Areca/palm leaf dinnerware into food at potentially harmful levels, leading to an import ban.


Key observations that warrant discussion

Global impact disparity: This primarily affects emerging economies like India, where many small-scale manufacturers invested in these solutions but had limited voice in the regulatory process that now shuts them out of major markets.


The testing gap: There's a fundamental lack of standardized safety testing for plant-based food contact materials. We've operated under the assumption that "natural = safe" - but this case proves otherwise.

At Mynusco, we've been advocating for years that using plant-based materials for food contact use should be a careful consideration, not a blind choice. This concern extends beyond areca/palm leaf products to other plant-based materials such as wood and bamboo alternatives.


Broader implications: If the FDA applied similar rigorous testing to other plant-based dinnerware (bamboo, wood, sugarcane), would we see similar findings? Our earlier testing has shown that some of the bamboo and wooden single-use cutlery contained carcinogenic substances that leach into food quite easily. The current approach from the US FDA feels reactive rather than systematic.


The path forward isn't about abandoning plant-based alternatives, but identifying right opportunities for plant-based alternatives, and creating robust systems that ensure they're truly safe for their intended use. This requires input from manufacturers, regulators, safety experts, and sustainability advocates working together.


source: Mahadev Chikkanna


My view on this subject is that we must need to know what we eat or drink before use it in our daily life cycle. I have known some siddha/natural medicine also has more ppm toxic levels of chemicals/minerals present in the natural products. We need it prescribed quantity and also need certificates of the chemicals and minerals present in such medicines before we consume it. Taking carcinogenic substances for the long term can cause many side effects on our body.


Likewise palm leaf based products, there must be some top layer coatings might have used in the production to have the better aesthetic appearance, heat resistance .Such wax layer & top coating need to be checked and its components. Pesticides ,water, are used for the plantation of the palm plant need to be checked because impurities of the water and harmful chemicals present in pesticides do part of the plant growth and be present there in the plant leaf forever.

Air and soil quality also needs to be checked on this plant to avoid confusion among plant based products.


Muthuramalingam K


WORKPLACE FLOOR MARKINGS : Simple Lines. Clear Rules. Fewer Incidents.

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