A pioneering water harvesting system inspired by the Namib Desert Beetle is one the biomimicry innovations that will feature in the first annual edition of Nature’s 100 Best© book. The book is an initiative of ZERI, Biomimicry Guild and the Biomimmicry Institute, in cooperation with IUCN, and UNEP.
The Namib Desert beetle lives in a location that receives a mere half an inch of rain a year yet can harvest water from fogs that blow in gales across the land several mornings each month. A team from the University of Oxford and the UK defense research firm QinetiQ, have designed a surface that mimics the water-attracting bumps and water-shedding valleys on the beetle’s wing scales that allows the insect to collect and funnel droplets thinner than a human hair.
The patchwork surface hinges on small, poppy-seed sized glass spheres in a layer of warm wax that tests show work like the beetle’s wing scales.
Trials have now been carried out to use the beetle film to capture water vapour from cooling towers. Initial tests have shown that the invention can return 10 per cent of lost water and lead to cuts in energy bills for nearby buildings by reducing a city’s heat sink effect.
An estimated 50,000 new water-cooling towers are erected annually and each large system evaporates and loses over 500 million litres.
Other researchers, some with funding from the US Defense Advanced Research Agency, are mimicking the beetle water collection system to develop tents that collect their own water up to surfaces that will ‘mix’ reagents for ‘lab-on-a-chip’ applications.
Source: UNEP, 28 May 2008

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