Bioinspired
Plate-Based Fog Collectors
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Abstract
In a recent work,
we explored the feeding mechanism of a shorebird
to transport liquid drops by repeatedly opening and closing its beak.
In this work, we apply the corresponding results to develop a new
artificial fog collector. The collector includes two nonparallel plates.
It has three advantages in comparison with existing artificial collectors:
(i) easy fabrication, (ii) simple design to scale up, and (iii) active
transport of condensed water drops. Two collectors have been built.
A small one with dimensions of 4.2 × 2.1 × 0.05 cm<sup>3</sup> (length × width × thickness) was first built and tested
to examine (i) the time evolution of condensed drop sizes and (ii)
the collection processes and efficiencies on the glass, SiO<sub>2</sub>, and SU-8 plates. Under similar experimental conditions, the amount
of water collected per unit area on the small collector is about 9.0,
4.7, and 3.7 times, respectively, as much as the ones reported for
beetles, grasses, and metal wires, and the total amount of water collected
is around 33, 18, and 15 times. On the basis of the understanding
gained from the tests on the small collector, a large collector with
dimensions of 26 × 10 × 0.2 cm<sup>3</sup> was further built
and tested, which was capable of collecting 15.8 mL of water during
a period of 36 min. The amount of water collected, when it is scaled
from 36 to 120 min, is about 878, 479, or 405 times more than what
was collected by individual beetles, grasses, or metal wires