posted on 2013-10-29, 00:00authored byKyoo-Chul Park, Shreerang S. Chhatre, Siddarth Srinivasan, Robert E. Cohen, Gareth H. McKinley
Fog represents a large untapped source
of potable water, especially
in arid climates. Numerous plants and animals use textural and chemical
features on their surfaces to harvest this precious resource. In this
work, we investigate the influence of the surface wettability characteristics,
length scale, and weave density on the fog-harvesting capability of
woven meshes. We develop a combined hydrodynamic and surface wettability
model to predict the overall fog-collection efficiency of the meshes
and cast the findings in the form of a design chart. Two limiting
surface wettability constraints govern the re-entrainment of collected
droplets and clogging of mesh openings. Appropriate tuning of the
wetting characteristics of the surfaces, reducing the wire radii,
and optimizing the wire spacing all lead to more efficient fog collection.
We use a family of coated meshes with a directed stream of fog droplets
to simulate a natural foggy environment and demonstrate a five-fold
enhancement in the fog-collecting efficiency of a conventional polyolefin
mesh. The design rules developed in this work can be applied to select
a mesh surface with optimal topography and wetting characteristics
to harvest enhanced water fluxes over a wide range of natural convected
fog environments.