Thinking about how to combine an Atmospheric Water Generator with - TopicsExpress



          

Thinking about how to combine an Atmospheric Water Generator with a Trompe and Nitinol. An atmospheric water generator needs solar panels or a power source to run the air compressors. It extracts water vapor from the atmosphere, condenses it, filters it and purifies it with UV light (245 nm) and/ or ionizing or ozonating water. The industrial AWGs are loud because of the air compressors. And the compressed system of the AWG is adiabatic. A trompe isothermically compresses air. So when you use it, the air is below freezing. Extremely cold. A trompe requires a source of running water. So if you use a trompe to power an industrial sized Atmospheric Water Generator, you solve the noise issue, can get rid of the adiabatic air compressors altogether, get rid of the solar panel, and the unit wouldnt ever get hot. Might have to have a heater actually to warm up the water since the compressed air from the trompe running the AWG might freeze the water. And you also might not need a natural source of water! Can use the water collected by the AWG to power the trompe. You could then combine a Nitinol Heat engine in the set up. Bubble the isothermically compressed air through a vat of water. It will keep the water very close to freezing. Then have an electric generator run by the compressed air which powers a heater. Then you have 2 vats of water. 1 cold, 1 heated. Put the Nitinol Heat engine in the varying temperature water and vwalla... you have a sustaining energy source from a trompe, AWG and Nitinol. Id need one hell of a kickstarter campaign. lol Ecolo Blue Industrial AWGs: store.ecoloblue-world/en/11-industrial-commercial Trompe: https://youtube/watch?v=SScpJMsCm9c Nitinol: https://youtube/watch?v=vTPNHmaxUCs Would need to know a bit of math. How much water would be required to flow into the shaft of the trompe to produce the needed bubbles in the reservoir? And what size industrial AWG would provide the water necessary? So take a place like San Diego where I live. Theres a major drought in California. With this set up near the reservoir, you could silently pump water into the reservoir daily without need for solar panels or any power from a grid regardless if its raining or not.
Posted on: Sun, 04 Jan 2015 21:54:55 +0000

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