Researchers at the University of Sydney and commercial start-up Dewpoint Innovations have created a nano-engineered polymer coating that not only reflects up to 97% of the sun’s rays, but also passively collects water. In tests, it was able to keep indoors up to 6 °C (~11 °F) cooler than the air outside.
That temperature differential results in water vapor condensing on the surface – like the fogging on a cold mirror – producing a steady trickle of droplets.
In trials on the roof of the Sydney Nanoscience Hub, the coating captured dew more than 30% of the year, generating as much as 390 mL of water per square meter (roughly 13 fluid ounces per 10.8 square feet) daily. This might not sound like a lot, but a 12-sq-m (about 129-sq-ft) section of treated roof could produce around 4.7 L (around 1.25 US gallons) of water per day under optimal conditions.
Most houses have a lot more roof than that. “Over an average residential roof,” reads the Dewpoint website, “you can expect enough water per day to cover your basic water needs.” That’s in addition, mind you, to the rainwater you’d be collecting as well, since you do need to have a typical rainwater collection system installed to capture the dew. In Sydney for example, assuming an average annual rainfall around 1 m (3.3 ft), The Tank Factory tells us we could expect to collect somewhere around 6 times more rainwater than condensation – but that equation would certainly look very different in drier areas.
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The team has recently finished up a six-month outdoor trial, with panels featuring the polymer paint-like coating set up on the roof of the Sydney Nanoscience Hub building. During this period, minute-by-minute data was collected on the coating’s cooling and water collection abilities, and found that dew could be collected over 32% of the year, suggesting water could be harvested from the air during periods without rain. What’s more, the coating withstood the challenging test of the harsh Australian sun, and showed no signs of degradation over the six months.
Painted tiles being tested on the roof of the Sydney Nanoscience Hub
University of Sydney
Most commercial white paints – especially those designed for exterior walls and roofs – use titanium dioxide as the primary pigment, which reflects UV light. However, while this novel coating may look like white paint on the surface, it gets its sun-shielding power through structure. The porous coating is made of polyvinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropene (PVDF-HFP), so reflects the sun through microscopic pores. Those tiny air pockets scatter sunlight in all directions without glare and without the need of UV-absorbing chemicals that can degrade over time. The result is a self-cooling, weather-resistant film that was able to sustain its high performance throughout the lengthy testing phase.
After a 5 hour scheduled downtime on just Fortnite for the launch of the Simpson collaboration on the 1st of November, the whole ecosystem went crashing down. Without login services, many of the games just cannot be played. This together with the IBM, Azure, AWS and Cloudflare crashes shows just how vulnerable you are when you are dependent on megalithic giants…
Resolved – This incident has been resolved.
Nov 2, 03:20 UTC
Update – We are continuing to investigate this issue.
Nov 1, 21:08 UTC
Investigating – We’re investigating reports of players loading into matches without equipped Outfits, as well as other functionality issues like Locker loadouts, Party invites, and Friends Lists not working correctly.
We’re working to fix this ASAP and will let you know when we have.
Nov 1, 21:07 UTC
Resolved – This incident has been resolved.
Nov 2, 03:20 UTC
Investigating – We’re investigating Fortnite login issues on all platforms. We’ll follow up here with an update once the issue is resolved.
Nov 1, 20:45 UTC
Completed – The scheduled maintenance has been completed.
Nov 1, 20:43 UTC
In progress – Scheduled maintenance is currently in progress. We will provide updates as necessary.
Nov 1, 15:30 UTC
Scheduled – ⏰ Following the Welcome, Our Alien Overlords live event in Fortnite (Saturday, November 1st at 11 AM ET), Fortnite will go into downtime at 11:30 AM ET (3:30 PM UTC). The v38.00 update and the new Fortnite Season will release later the same day.
Oct 31, 15:07 UTC