Bioinspired yarn can harvest water from fog

Phys.org  September 30, 2024
An international team of researchers (Italy, Germany, Sweden, Japan) developed a double-strand hydrophobic PVDF-HFP/hydrophilic PAN nanofibers yarn by electrospinning and twisting techniques like the hydrophobic/hydrophilic pattern of desert beetles and water self-propulsion property of spider silks. The double-strand cooperation approach allowed for water deposition on hydrophobic PVDF-HFP segment and transport under the asymmetric capillary driving force of hydrophilic PAN segment speeding up the aggregation and growth of droplets. They optimized the effects of the composition and the diameter ratio of the two primary yarns for boosting fog collection performance. The double-strand anisotropic yarn provided an effective method for water harvesting, and it holds the potential to inspire innovative design concepts for fog collection materials in challenging environments… read more. TECHNICAL ARTICLE

Morphology of double-strand yarns with varying diameter… Credit: Chinese Journal of Polymer Science (2024).

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