Next Article in Journal
Comprehensive Methodology and Analysis to Determine the Environmental Flow Regime in the Temporary Stream “La Yerbabuena” in Aguascalientes, Mexico
Previous Article in Journal
Atmospheric Exchange of Carbon Dioxide and Water Vapor above a Tropical Sandy Coastal Plain
Previous Article in Special Issue
Atmospheric Water Harvesting with Metal-Organic Frameworks and Their Composites: From Materials to Devices
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Potential Analysis of Atmospheric Water Harvesting Technologies from the Perspective of “Trading-in Energy for Water”

1
School of Water Resources and Electric Power, Qinghai University, Xining 810016, China
2
State Key Laboratory of Hydroscience & Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China
3
College of Water Resources & Civil Engineering, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100083, China
4
State Key Laboratory of Plateau Ecology and Agriculture, Qinghai University, Xining 810016, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Water 2023, 15(5), 878; https://doi.org/10.3390/w15050878
Submission received: 12 January 2023 / Revised: 7 February 2023 / Accepted: 12 February 2023 / Published: 24 February 2023
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Atmospheric Water Resources Exploitation and Utilization)

Abstract

:
An applicable, high-volume, and sustainable water uptake technology can alleviate freshwater shortages, improve the energy utilization rate and promote the development of energy technology. Traditional seawater desalination, fog water, and dew collection are limited by the geographical environment, and the water resource transportation cost is high, or the water uptake volume is limited, so they cannot be used on a large scale. There are potential safety problems with wastewater reuse and recycled water. Atmospheric water harvesting technology uses energy for direct condensation or uses adsorbent to absorb water, which is characterized by strong sustainability, high applicability, decentralization, and stable water uptake. This study summarizes the working principle of mainstream atmospheric water harvesting technologies, mainly including condensation, absorption, and desorption water harvesting, and some active dew and fog collection technologies. It also theoretically analyzes the energy consumption of condensation and adsorption and desorption water harvesting technologies. Aiming at the problems of difficult condensing for direct condensation and long adsorption/desorption cycle of adsorption and desorption water harvesting, it summarizes the countermeasures of multi-stage condensation and multi-cycle adsorption and desorption. The development prospect of atmospheric water harvesting technologies is also discussed

1. Introduction

There are four billion people in the world facing water shortages, of which 500 million people are facing serious water shortages throughout the year, and the number is still rising [1]. Water shortages can be solved in two aspects: broadening sources and reducing expenditure. Limiting the water consumption of the basin, improving the water utilization rate, and better allocating water resources can alleviate water shortage from the perspective of “reducing expenditure” [2]. However, it does not increase the total amount of water resources. Meanwhile, the availability of surface water and groundwater is limited by their geographical position and intra-annual variability.
From the perspective of “broadening sources,” many researchers devote themselves to finding a globally applicable and sustainable, high-volume water source. Seawater desalination is a relatively developed technology. However, the production cost of seawater desalination is about 1.28 times that of tap water and 1.20 times that of reclaimed water in China [3]. Moreover, water transmission incurs costs, and desalination plants also produce toxic byproducts in the process of reverse osmosis and multi-stage flash distillation [4]. For arid and semi-arid areas such as the United Arab Emirates, artificial precipitation enhancement technology may become more feasible and economical than seawater desalination [5]. Rainwater collection is widely used for water supply, which is limited by climate factors. The randomness and uneven seasonal distribution of natural precipitation is the biggest risk in the implementation of rainwater harvesting projects [6]. Besides, the water quality deteriorates in the process of collection, storage and household use, and the economic recovery period of rainwater collection systems is also long [7]. Reclaimed water, the treated domestic wastewater, or rainwater are mostly used for agricultural irrigation, groundwater recharging, toilet flushing or industrial water use due to water quality issues [8]. The quality of reclaimed water is distinct from that of drinking water; it is likely to deteriorate, even after advanced treatment, during distribution and transport [9]. Brackish water resources tend to occur in the upland areas of sedimentary basins close to recharge areas. On average, brackish water resources occupy about 11% of aquifer volume [10]. The exploitation and utilization of brackish water [11] and mine water [12,13] also significantly relieves the water supply pressure from local agriculture and industry and improves the problem of land salinization.
In recent years, technical methods of harvesting water from the air have been developed. Annually, the oceans transport 45,500 km3 of net water vapor to the continents, and the total land evaporation is 65,500 km3. With atmospheric circulation and water vapor diffusion, water vapor is widely distributed in the air, with a total number of 3000 km3 over land [14]. The global average residence time of atmospheric water vapor is about nine days [15], and the water vapor can be rapidly updated. Thus atmospheric water is a potential renewable water source with huge reserves [14].
In addition to rainfall and snowfall with extremely uneven spatial and temporal distribution, fog and dew are important components of atmospheric water [16]. Fog is small water droplets suspending at or near the Earth’s surface, reducing horizontal visibility to less than 1 km [17], and mainly occurs in coastal areas. Dew refers to water droplets formed on the base surface with a temperature lower than the dew point temperature and higher than the freezing point, which is more widely distributed.
Both fog and dew can be collected passively as water sources. The efficiency is determined by the air moisture, which is mainly affected by air temperature, air pressure, and relative humidity [18]. The basic idea of artificially collecting water vapor in the air is to extract water by condensing the vapor [19]. By increasing the dew point of compressed air condensation consumes too much energy and is not conducive to popularization [20]. There are roughly two technical paths for atmospheric water harvesting: (1) According to the thermodynamic principle, reducing the air temperature by using external energy can increase the relative humidity and make the water vapor reach the dew point temperature to produce dew, which can then be collected. (2) The adsorbent of water vapor can also be used to capture water vapor in the air, which is then heated for desorption to extract water. Generally, the atmospheric water harvesting technology using the adsorbent has lower requirements for air humidity, and water can be taken at lower air humidity [21].
There are several potential advantages of harvesting water from the air: (1) The atmospheric water has a large quantity with rapid renewal [15]. (2) It is relatively stable and can be used sustainably [22]. (3) The water quality is high [23], as the water harvesting device and the production process are physically isolated from the polluted underground and surface water. Meanwhile, onsite water harvesting also controls pollution during transfer and storage. (4) A decentralized device can make water available locally, saving the cost of laying pipelines or transportation. The cost of water extraction may be lower than that of drilling groundwater or pipeline water transmission [23].
This paper introduces the working principle and performance-influencing factors of two mainstream atmospheric water harvesting technologies, i.e., the direct condensation of air and adsorption and desorption water harvesting. Some active fog and dew water collection technologies are also introduced. Through theoretical calculation, it quantifies the energy consumption per unit of water uptake, the proportion of useless power, and the appropriate environmental range of different water uptake modes for direct condensation. The influence of different factors on the water harvesting performance of adsorption and desorption water harvesting is quantitatively analyzed. The ideas for the improvement of different water harvesting technologies are put forward. That is the summary of multi-stage condensation for the difficulty of water harvesting under low humidity conditions of direct condensation. Besides, the working mode of multi-cycle adsorption and desorption is summarized to solve the problem of long adsorption/desorption cycle of adsorption and desorption water harvesting. This paper also summarizes the technical development and application prospects of atmospheric water harvesting technology and provides a reference for the design and application of atmospheric water harvesting systems.

2. Atmospheric Water Harvesting by Condensation

2.1. Fundamentals of Technology & Equipment

Figure 1 shows the schematic diagram of atmospheric water harvesting systems based on condensation. After being fed into the system by the fan, the air is cooled by the condensing plate, and the water drops are collected after being condensed when the temperature is lower than the dew point temperature.
The energy obtained from sustainable energies such as solar, wind, and thermal energy is mainly used in three ways: (1) refrigerating to reduce the temperature of the condensing surface and then the air temperature to obtain water; (2) transporting fresh air into the system to drive air circulation; (3) monitoring and controlling the system to adapt to the environment and reduce energy consumption.
The energy is mainly consumed in the refrigeration stage, either compressor refrigeration or semiconductor refrigeration. The compressor has higher refrigeration efficiency with large volume and potential environmental pollution risk, while the semiconductor is easy to miniaturize with lower refrigeration efficiency. Semiconductor refrigeration is a pair of thermocouples composed of two different metals using the Peltier effect. When direct current is applied to the thermocouple, heat absorption and heat release occur at the node of the thermocouple, forming a cold end and a hot end. The compressor refrigeration includes four stages: (1) The low-temperature and low-pressure refrigerant is compressed into a high-temperature and high-pressure state by the compressor. (2) It enters the condenser for heat dissipation and becomes a normal temperature and high-pressure liquid state. (3) It changes into a low-pressure and low-temperature liquid through the throttle valve. (4) It is transported to the evaporator for evaporation and becomes a low-temperature and low-pressure gas state. This process absorbs the external heat for refrigeration.

2.2. Theoretical Energy Consumption

The following analyzes three aspects: (1) The energy consumption per unit of water uptake. (2) The proportion of energy consumption to the total energy consumption of water uptake in the process of improving air humidity. (3) The energy consumption difference of the same water uptake volume with multi-stage water uptake and single-stage water uptake.

2.2.1. Total Energy Consumption Per Unit Water Uptake

Rao et al. [24] regard reaching saturated humidity from a state point as the minimum energy requirement. However, in the actual water uptake process, the condensing temperature is set to zero to improve the water uptake rate. The temperature of the condensing plate shall not be lower than 0 °C to prevent frost formation. When the temperature is lower than 0 °C, the air moisture content is low, which is considered not feasible for water harvesting through condensing [24]. Then Hc is used to represent the ratio of energy consumption to water uptake from a certain state to 0 °C and relative humidity (RH) = 100 % [25].
H c = h t , ϕ h 0 , 100 ω t , ϕ ω 0 , 100
where ht,ϕ is the enthalpy of humid air at t °C and RH = ϕ, kJ/kg; h0,100 is the enthalpy of humid air at 0 °C and RH = 100%, kJ/kg, ωt,ϕ is the air moisture content at t °C, and RH = ϕ, kg/kg; ω0,100 is the air moisture content at 0 °C and RH = 100%, kg/kg.
The enthalpy of humid air h is calculated by Equation (2) [18]:
h = ( 2491.3 + 1.90 t ) ω + 1.0 t
where ω is the air moisture content, kg/kg; t is the ambient temperature, °C.
The air moisture content ω is calculated by Equation (3) [18]:
ω = 0.622 E ϕ P E ϕ
where P is taken as standard atmospheric pressure, P = 101325 Pa; φ is the relative humidity, %; E is the saturated water vapor pressure at t °C, Pa.
The saturated water vapor pressure E at temperature t can be calculated using the Magnus formula shown in Equation (4) [26]:
E = E 0 × 10 7.45 t 235 + t
where E0 is the saturated water vapor pressure of the water surface at 0 °C, Pa.
However, Hc only represents the energy consumption of humid air between different states; actual energy consumption can be represented by Hcr:
H cr = H c EER + v + s m
where v is the ventilator power, W; s is the supplementary monitor and controller power, W; m is the water uptake, kg; EER is the refrigeration efficiency, dimensionless.
Gido et al. [25] used Moisture Harvesting Index (MHI) to represent the ratio of latent heat of water vaporization to energy consumption per unit of water uptake to determine the working environment. In practice, energy consumption per unit of water uptake can also be used to determine the working environment. As shown in Figure 2, at the same temperature, with the increase of relative humidity, the ambient temperature is closer to the dew point. Therefore, the environment is more conducive to water uptake, and the energy consumption per unit of water uptake is reduced. With the same air moisture content, the higher the temperature, the lower the relative humidity, and the farther the ambient temperature is from the dew point, the more unfavorable the environment is for water uptake. The energy consumption per unit of water uptake also increases. The slope of the 100% relative humidity line is steeper at higher temperatures, indicating that more water can be obtained by lowering the same temperature in the region than in the region with a lower temperature. The energy consumption per unit of water uptake is small only when the relative humidity is above 30%, and the higher the relative humidity is, the better. Besides, the white area outside the 100% relative humidity line represents the oversaturated area. Meanwhile, the black area represents the inaccessible area, i.e., the moisture content area corresponding to 100% relative humidity and 0 °C when the moisture content is lower. Such representations are also applicable in Figure 3 and Figure 4.

2.2.2. Proportion of Energy Consumption in Improving Humidity

From a certain state point to the saturated state of air, the external energy is only used to reduce the temperature of humid air and increase the RH. There is no water uptake, and this part of the work is useless. So Qw is used to represent this part of work to the total work to the state at tc °C and RH = 100%.
Q w = 1.90 ω t , ϕ + 1.0 t t d t , ϕ h t , ϕ h t c , 100 c w t c ω t , ϕ ω t c , 100
where tdt,ϕ is the dew point at t °C and RH = ϕ; tc is the temperature of humid air out the system, °C; htc,100 is the enthalpy of humid air at tc °C and RH = 100%; cw is the heat capacity of liquid water, 4.2 kJ/(kg*°C); wtc,100 is the air moisture content at tc °C and RH = 100%.
The approximate value of dew point td is obtained by Magnus-Tetens Approximation shown in Equations (7) and (8) [27].
t d = b γ ( t , ϕ ) a γ ( t , ϕ )
γ ( t , ϕ ) = at b + t + ln ( ϕ )
The constants a and b are a = 17.27 °C, b = 237.7 °C.
In Figure 3, the part above the moisture corresponding to tc = 30 °C is the Qw value under this working condition. The part between the moisture corresponding to tc = 20 °C and tc = 30 °C is the Qw value under the working condition of tc = 20 °C, and so on. The upper part of the boundary at each working condition is dislocated from the lower part to the left. This is because the corresponding state point at the upper part of the boundary is far from the dew point temperature and has less difference with the moisture at the boundary. The sensible heat and latent heat of water vapor are less, so the Qw value becomes larger. At the same temperature, the higher the relative humidity, the smaller the proportion of useless work. Under the same moisture, the higher the temperature is, the greater the proportion of idle work is, which is consistent with the expression in Figure 2. With the increase of tc, the dividing line of reactive power in each working condition becomes steeper, which indicates that the proportion of energy consumed to saturate from a state point decreases.

2.2.3. Energy Consumption of Single-Stage and Multi-Stage Condensation

Some researchers attempt to increase the amount of water in a water uptake process by increasing the number of water uptake stages. In order to compare the energy consumption of different water uptake stages from different state points, Qm is used to represent the ratio of energy consumption of the same water uptake volume between single-stage water uptake mode and multi-stage water uptake mode.
Q m = n h t , ϕ h t n , 100 c w t n ω t , ϕ ω t n , 100 h t , ϕ h 0 , 100
where n is the number of water uptakes, htn,100 is the enthalpy of humid air at tn °C, and RH = 100%; tn is the temperature corresponding to the air moisture content after one water uptake cycle when the number of times of water uptake is n; ϕtc,100 is the air moisture content at tn °C and RH = 100%. Note: n represents the number of times of water uptake, which refers to the single-stage water uptake mode. Only n times of single-stage water uptake cycles can produce the same amount of water as one n-stage water uptake mode.
In Figure 4, n = 2 means that only 1/2 of the water is produced at this state point at one time. The same water volume as the two-stage water uptake mode is produced through two water uptake processes. In the area above the line Qm = 1, the energy consumption by single-stage water uptake is lower for the same water volume, and the below means that the energy consumption by multi-stage water uptake is lower. With the increase in the number of stages, the areas with better single-stage water uptake are reduced in the upper part of the figure and increased in the lower part. As single-stage water uptake needs to overcome more times of useless work, it is only applicable in areas where the useless work was multiplied to account for less total work.

2.3. Energy Consumption of Existing Technologies

2.3.1. Single-Stage Condensation

Most water harvesting systems by condensing are single-stage, and the water uptake rate is not high due to the limitation of water uptake stages. The condensing plate is the key link from the cooling capacity of the condenser to the formation of water droplets when the air temperature drops. Many studies have made improvements based on this to improve the water uptake rate. Jin et al. [28] injected salt solution between the two films, incorporated the condensed water vapor with the salt solution, and regenerated the diluted salt solution through solar water uptake regeneration, realizing continuous water uptake at low temperatures without frost. The research results of the wetting characteristics of the substrate surface by dew and fog water collection can also be used for reference to improve the condensing water uptake surface [29,30]. The super hydrophobic condensation surface has faster water drop removal and higher heat transfer efficiency [30]. However, bead condensation on superhydrophobic surfaces is not conducive to the formation and merger of droplets. Besides, the non-directional ejection of droplets from the condensation surface is not conducive to the collection of water [31]. In the study of Zamuruyev et al. [32], the area with a contact angle of 126° has the largest droplet volume-to-area ratio. The angle at which the condensation plate is installed also affects the formation and removal of droplets. Hand et al. [33] studied the influence of heatsink orientation on condensate efficiency and obtained the highest water uptake rate when rotating and tilting at 60° and 75°, respectively. At the same time, when the heatsink is completely filled with water, the water uptake rate decreases by an order of magnitude. The water uptake rate of the surface cleaned per hour increases by 18%. The energy in the condensed dry cold air can also be used. Adding a heat exchanger to the system can enhance the heat dissipation of the hot end of the heatsink by using the sensible heat of the condensed dry cold air to reduce energy consumption [30].

2.3.2. Multi-Stage Condensation

In the daytime, the temperature is high, and the relative humidity is low. Meanwhile, the temperature is low at night, and the relative humidity is high, which is more conducive to the condensation of water vapor. Water uptake by condensation has poor water uptake performance due to low humidity during daytime operation. The system performance can be improved by multi-stage treatment of treated air, humidifying or concentrating the air, and then condensing at the next stage so as to enhance the adaptability of water uptake systems by condensation to the environment and water uptake rate. Tsutomu et al. [34] have made a multi-stage water uptake device using thermoelectric modules. The air enters the secondary water uptake unit for water uptake after passing through the primary water uptake unit. Under the conditions of constant air-specific humidity and different temperatures and relative humidity, the more stages of the water uptake device, the higher the water uptake, and the higher the water uptake under the same energy consumption. Tu et al. [35] proposed the use of a multi-stage dehumidification wheel to humidify the air with adsorption materials and then dehumidify the water through the evaporator. This method can improve the evaporation temperature and water uptake rate. Regenerative air from each stage of the dehumidification wheel absorbs heat from the heater and then releases heat from the humidification side of the dehumidification wheel. The adsorbed water vaporizes when the adsorption material heats up, and the humidity of the regenerative air increases. In comparison, the two modes of multi-stage dehumidification of air on the dehumidification side and air discharge after dehumidification at each stage on the dehumidification side, the latter is more efficient. Zhao et al. [36] used membranes with high permeability to water vapor and low permeability to nitrogen, oxygen, or carbon dioxide to pretreat air to concentrate water vapor, reducing energy consumption by 38.9%. However, the airflow of this method is small, which limits its water uptake rate.
Table 1 summarizes the features and parameters of selected atmospheric water harvesting systems based on condensation. Device performance is measured under different working conditions. In general, the multi-stage water uptake mode has higher water uptake performance than the single-stage water uptake mode. The numerical simulation study has a higher water uptake performance than the experimental study.

2.4. Potential Analysis of Water Uptake by Condensation

2.4.1. Influence Factors on the Harvesting Efficiency of Condensation

The performance of the water uptake system by condensation is affected by many factors, which may be the reason for the low water uptake rate in actual use. The main influencing factors are weather and climate, ventilation, condensation surface temperature, cold end structure, and materials [25,29,30,37,38,39,40]. The weather and climate have a great impact on the energy consumption per unit water uptake of water uptake by condensation. The low temperature and low humidity environment sharply increase the energy demand [39]. Changes in the weather, climate, and diurnal fluctuation affect the water uptake performance of the system by affecting the ambient temperature and humidity. The air with high temperature and humidity has higher water content, which is conducive to water uptake. Selecting the operation at night and in the month with high humidity can significantly reduce energy consumption [25,34]. The wet air is sent into the system via a ventilator. Large air volume and fast air velocity can improve the heat transfer coefficient of the condensation surface. At the same time, the disturbance of the air accelerates the formed droplets to remove faster, which is conducive to heat transfer. However, when the refrigerating capacity of the evaporator is constant, excessive wind speed leads to insufficient heat exchange between the air and the condensation surface, and the water uptake decreases. The droplets can also be removed automatically after being generated on the hydrophobic surface, ensuring the heat transfer efficiency of the condensation surface. However, when the temperature of the condensation surface is too low, frost forms on the refrigeration fin, which blocks the refrigeration channel and reduces the water uptake [34]. In practical applications, the ambient temperature and humidity always change. Different ambient temperatures, humidity, and air volume correspond to different optimal outputs of the system. Therefore, the water uptake system that can monitor the environment and adjust the air volume and refrigeration temperature can be applied to more scenarios and can save energy consumption [38,40]. The experimental test shows that it takes more than 1 h from the start of the device to stable water production [30,37].

2.4.2. Application Prospect

The energy consumption of direct condensation is 1–4 L/kWh [39]. As shown in Figure 2, the boundary line of water uptake energy consumption is relatively close to the relative humidity line. Considering part of the energy consumption of the ventilator, monitor, and controller, the coefficient of performance can reach 3.8. To meet the water uptake performance of 1 L/kWh, log10 (Hc) should be less than 4. The corresponding air moisture content should be more than 5 g/kg, and the relative humidity should be more than 30%. Renewable energy can be used to supply energy for atmospheric water harvesting technology to reduce energy costs. Solar energy, wind energy, and combustible gas can be converted into different forms of energy, such as the electric energy of a condenser, the mechanical energy of a compressor, and the heat energy for desorption [41,42,43,44,45]. Take China as an example, given a household consumes 25 L of drinking water per day. Taking a water uptake performance of 1 L/kWh and an energy utilization rate of 50%, the electricity quantity of discarded wind and solar [46] can provide drinking water for more than 1.5 million households for one year. In addition, the problem of gas discarding also exists in the exploitation of combustible gas from natural gas, waste gas from landfills, and biomass gasification. The water consumption from natural gas exploitation is large. Atmospheric water harvesting technology can be used to improve energy utilization and provide water for natural gas exploitation [44]. The atmospheric water harvesting system based on biomass gasification and combustible gas energy supply is expected to solve the energy, environment, and water problems at the same time [41]. Water vapor can circulate rapidly, and the water uptake is mainly subject to the utilization of renewable energy and the performance of the condenser. With the improvement in condenser performance, the proportion of monitor and controller energy consumption decreases, and the proportion of ventilator energy consumption increases. In the process of converting the refrigerating capacity to a lower air temperature for water uptake, air volume, the temperature of the condensation surface, the thermal conductivity of condensation surface material, the wetting characteristics of the condensation surface, and the installation of condensation surface jointly affect the heat transfer efficiency. How to achieve the overall optimization is worth considering. For the problem that environmental conditions have a great impact on water uptake energy consumption, as shown in Table 1, the enhanced membrane system improves water uptake performance by reducing the proportion of useless work, which has a high water uptake potential. The dehumidification wheel also improves water uptake performance by humidifying the air, which is more adaptable to the environment and has greater potential than single-stage water uptake systems. Figure 4 also shows that the multi-stage water uptake mode has less energy consumption than the single-stage water uptake mode at lower relative humidity, but there is a significant difference between the performance of experimental research and theoretical research. Patel et al. [47] explored the performance of a water uptake system using a compressor under different climatic conditions. Under warm and humid conditions, the minimum water uptake energy consumption is 0.75 L/kWh, and the experimental value of energy consumption is about 2.75 times the theoretical value. In addition, the adaptability of the water uptake systems by condensation can be improved through the intelligent control of air volume and refrigeration temperature according to the environment, the development of the low-temperature frost free water uptake methods, the addition of the regenerator and the optimization of the system structure, so as to improve its practicability in the real scene.

3. Atmospheric Water Harvesting by Adsorption and Desorption

3.1. Fundamentals of Technology & Equipment

As shown in Figure 5, the main difference between the adsorption method and the condensation method lies in the use of the adsorbent. The adsorbent can adsorb water vapor at a lower air humidity and then use solar energy or other heat sources to heat the adsorbent for desorption. The water vapor is then passively or actively condensed to collect water, so it is more widely applicable than the condensation method. Generally, there is a positive correlation between the specific surface area of the adsorbent and the water absorption capacity. From the traditional silica gel, a molecular sieve, activated carbon, and hygroscopic salt form the composite adsorbent, Metal Organic Framework (MOF) material, a thermosensitive polymer, and nanoporous material; the water absorption capacity of the adsorbent has been improved step by step, providing a material basis for using the adsorbent to uptake water. The adsorbent is placed in the heat collecting bed, which is the key link from the heat source to water vapor conversion, and affects the transfer of material and heat. It should have good heat transfer performance and ensure gas flow so that the adsorbent can quickly absorb and desorb. The concentrator can direct sunlight to the heat-collecting bed to speed up the desorption process. The air can flow passively in the heat-collecting bed or be driven by a ventilator so as to speed up the adsorption process. The high humidity airflow generated by desorption can be passively condensed through the condensation plate, and the use of the condenser can improve the condensation efficiency.

3.2. Theoretical Energy Consumption

It is a spontaneous process for the adsorbent to adsorb water from the air, which does not require additional energy input [48]. The external energy is only used in the desorption stage. The high temperature and humid air after desorption can be collected through natural cooling and condensation. Peeters et al. [39] ignored the heat used to heat the adsorbent when calculating the energy consumption of the adsorption/desorption air-water harvesting process. Siegel et al. [49] considered the specific heat capacity of water and adsorbent as a whole. Now, water and adsorbent are considered separately. It is assumed that water is stored in the adsorbent as a liquid after being adsorbed. Both the adsorbent and the liquid water in it are at ambient temperature. Desorption starts when the water is heated to the desorption temperature. The energy consumption per unit water uptake Hs is expressed as:
H s = h d h a w a w d = c a + c w w a t r t a w a w d + h ad 1.9 t r
where ha is the enthalpy of the system before desorption, kJ/kg; hd is the enthalpy of the system after desorption, kJ/kg; wa is the water absorption rate of the adsorbent before desorption, kg/kg; wd is the water absorption rate of adsorbent after desorption, kg/kg; ca is the specific heat capacity of adsorbent, kJ/(kg*°C); ta is the temperature of the system before desorption °C; tr is the temperature of the system after desorption, °C; had is the adsorption heat, kJ/kg. It can be seen from the above formula that when the specific heat capacity of the adsorbent is smaller, the temperature after desorption is lower, the temperature before desorption is higher, the water absorption rate before desorption is larger, the water absorption rate after desorption is lower, and the adsorption heat is lower, the energy consumption per unit water uptake is smaller. where ha is the enthalpy of the system before desorption, kJ/kg; hd is the enthalpy of the system after desorption, kJ/kg; wa is the water absorption rate of the adsorbent before desorption, kg/kg; wd is the water absorption rate of adsorbent after desorption, kg/kg; ca is the specific heat capacity of adsorbent, kJ/(kg* °C); ta is the temperature of the system before desorption °C; tr is the temperature of the system after desorption, °C; had is the adsorption heat, kJ/kg. It can be seen from the above formula that when the specific heat capacity of the adsorbent is smaller, the temperature after desorption is lower, the temperature before desorption is higher, the water absorption rate before desorption is larger, the water absorption rate after desorption is lower, and the adsorption heat is lower, the energy consumption per unit water uptake is smaller.
The enthalpy of the system before desorption ha can be calculated by Equation (11):
h a = c a + c w w a t a
The enthalpy of the system after desorption hd can be calculated by Equation (12):
h d = c a + c w w a t r + w a w d h ad 1.9 t r
The actual unit energy consumption Hsr also takes into account the thermal efficiency of the heat source and water vapor condensation rate, expressed as:
H sr = H s η t η c + v + s + c m
where ηt is the thermal efficiency, dimensionless; ηc is the conversion rate of released water vapor and obtained water, dimensionless; c is the power of the condenser, W.
In Figure 6, the horizontal axis shows that the respective variables change uniformly from the initial value to the final value. The specific heat capacity of the adsorbent changes from 0.76 kJ/kg/k to 0 kJ/kg/k, the water absorption rate before desorption changes from 0.8 to 4.8, the temperature after desorption changes from 85 °C to 42.5 °C, the temperature before desorption changes from 10 °C to 40 °C, the water absorption rate after desorption changes from 0.2 to 0, and the adsorption heat changes from 2645 kJ/kg to 2260 kJ/kg. When the water absorption rate before desorption increases, the reduction of energy consumption per unit water uptake is fast at first and slow then. When the above optimization is carried out for one variable and other independent variables are constant, the decreasing effect on energy consumption per unit water uptake is ranked from strong to weak as adsorption heat > temperature after desorption > temperature before desorption > water absorption rate after desorption > specific heat capacity of the adsorbent.

3.3. Energy Consumption of Existing Technologies

The traditional adsorption and desorption water uptake system mostly adopts the day and night water uptake mode of absorbing water at night and desorbing during the day. Its water uptake is limited by the amount of water absorbed at night and requires a large number of adsorbents. In order to break through the limit of the adsorption and desorption rate of adsorbent on the number of water uptake cycles in a day, the system structure, the modification of adsorption materials, and the water uptake mode should be improved. In the early days, the adsorption and desorption rate of the adsorbent was limited, which could only be improved from the system structure, resulting in such modes as multiple sets of adsorbents, flippable adsorption stage, rotating adsorption table, etc. Liu et al. [50] used two sets of adsorbers, which can desorb when one adsorber adsorbs so as to achieve circulating water uptake. The time of one adsorption and desorption cycle is reduced, and the water uptake rate is improved. Wu et al. [51] assembled cylindrical adsorbent on both sides of the flippable adsorption stage. When one side desorbs, the other side absorbs. After one side is desorbed, the stage flips over to achieve continuous adsorption and desorption. This is due to the high heat transfer performance of the vertically aligned porous networks of cylindrical monoliths. Xu et al. [52] used lithium chloride, reduced graphene oxide, and sodium alginate matrix to manufacture nanocomposite adsorbent with vertical and layered pores. Four groups of adsorbents are used to adsorb and desorb alternately, and the ventilator is introduced to force air convection to achieve continuous water uptake. The improvement of adsorbent material can fundamentally solve the restriction of adsorption and desorption rates on multiple water uptakes in a day. It can mainly be improved by using liquid adsorbent, developing efficient photothermal adsorbent, and fluidizing adsorbent. Qi et al. [53] used liquid adsorbent to realize simultaneous adsorption and desorption, which improved the water uptake rate. The adsorbent is divided into the adsorption part and desorption part, which are connected with each other. The adsorption part absorbs water from the air, and the water diffuses from the adsorption part to the desorption part for desorption. Li et al. [54] designed and manufactured a nanoscale photothermal adsorbent, which can adsorb water vapor of the same weight as the adsorbent in 3 h at 60% relative humidity and desorbs in only 0.5 h under 1 kW/m2 solar radiation. The outer layer of adsorbent particles is a hollow carbon ball and acts as a photothermal component at the same time. The inner layer is filled with hygroscopic salt LiCL, and the space between stacks ensures the transport of water vapor. The continuous air-water device based on adsorbent is manufactured. The adsorbent is installed on a rotating horizontal cylinder. The upper part of the cylinder is exposed to the sun for desorption, and the lower part absorbs water from the air, which may provide a solution for large-scale, automated, and factory deployment. Mulchandani et al. [55] adopted the same idea, using photothermal materials to improve the desorption speed and desorption water volume of the adsorbent so as to achieve multiple water uptake cycles within a day. Terzis et al. [56] used the fluidized MOF to realize the high-frequency adsorption-desorption cycle of water vapor. The continuous cycle can exert the water absorption capacity of MOF-801 by more than 75%, and the water uptake can reach 10 L per kilogram of MOF-801 per day. The suspended particles are composed of fine adsorbent powder, and their aggregates have a high specific surface area, which can realize rapid diffusion of mass and heat, so the adsorption-desorption cycle is fast. The water uptake mode can also be changed to achieve multiple water uptakes in a day. Park et al. [57] used solar energy to trigger multiple adsorption and desorption processes in a day according to the performance of the adsorbent. The absorbent absorbs for a period of time and desorbs for a period of time repeatedly, making full use of energy and increasing the water uptake rate by 80%.
Table 2 shows the features and parameters of selected atmospheric water harvesting systems with the multi-adsorption-desorption cycles mentioned above. The research mentioned is all experimental research. The performance of the device is measured under different working conditions, and the performance indicators are inconsistent. In general, the water uptake performance of the device is 0.42–2.81 L/kg/day or 0.039–0.52 L/kg/hour.

3.4. Potential Analysis of Atmospheric Water Harvesting by Adsorption and Desorption

3.4.1. Influence Factors on the Harvesting Efficiency of Condensation

The adsorption material is the core of the adsorption and desorption water uptake system, which needs to have many characteristics. At the same time, the system structure affects whether the performance of the adsorption material can be exerted [61,62,63,64,65]. A good water uptake system based on adsorption and desorption should meet the requirements that the adsorbent has good water stability, high water absorption rate, fast adsorption and desorption, low desorption heat, low desorption temperature, small specific heat capacity, good regeneration stability, low cost, good heat transfer performance of the heat collection bed, and coordinated desorption and condensation. Good water stability is an inevitable requirement for adsorbent, and the non-deliquescence of adsorbent is beneficial to system structure design. Most improvements based on adsorption materials only focus on improving the water absorption rate, but the heat and mass transfer performance of the adsorbent are equally important. They affect the speed of adsorption and desorption and thus affect the performance of the system [61,62,64,65]. The fast adsorption and desorption mean that the water uptake system can complete more adsorption and desorption cycles in a day to achieve higher water uptake. Low desorption temperature, low specific heat capacity, and low desorption heat mean that the system requires lower energy for operation and can achieve higher water uptake per unit of energy. The energy of adsorption and desorption water uptake is mainly consumed in the heating and desorption stage of the adsorbent, part of which is used to heat water and adsorbent and part of which is used to make the adsorbed water vaporize. The addition of heat storage in the system can store excess heat, respond to solar radiation changes, and extend the desorption time [66]. Good regeneration stability of adsorbent is also the premise of the application of adsorption and desorption atmospheric water harvesting technology [61,65]. The adsorption and desorption of water harvesting require a large number of adsorbents, and the low-cost adsorbent is the guarantee for the economy of the technology in practical application. The excellent heat transfer performance of the heat collection bed can reduce energy loss. Meanwhile, the introduction of the condenser can strengthen condensation and improve water uptake [63]. The optimization of adsorbent bed structure and condensation can fully exert the water absorption capacity of adsorbent but fundamentally improve the water uptake.

3.4.2. Application Prospect

The adsorption and desorption water uptake system has lower requirements on the environmental temperature and humidity than the condensation water uptake system and is suitable for use in arid areas. The energy consumption is usually 0.1–1 L/kWh [39]. In the study of Lord et al. [67], the north of South America, the east of Africa, and Southeast Asia have a large potential for atmospheric water harvesting, and these regions are regions lacking in drinking water. The use of adsorption and desorption water harvesting technology is expected to achieve the goal of providing drinking water for 1 billion people. The key is to achieve continuous water uptake to improve the water uptake performance of the system. Increasing the adsorption and desorption speed can double the water uptake rate and reduce the amount of the adsorbent, which is conducive to the miniaturization of the device and reduce the manufacturing cost. The continuous water uptake can adsorb in the daytime, which is conducive to exerting the maximum adsorption capacity of the adsorbent and improving the energy utilization rate [68]. It is also a good option to use the photothermal adsorbent to integrate the adsorbent and the heat collection bed to improve the heat transfer efficiency of the adsorbent, which can enable the system to work at a lower ambient temperature [69]. In the study of Peeters et al. [39], the theoretical energy consumption of the adsorption and desorption method is no big different from the actual energy consumption. However, the adsorption and desorption water uptake system used in a low-humidity environment leads to low water uptake performance.

4. Active Collection of Fog and Dew

The traditional collection of fog and dew is passive. Improving the substrate surface materials and collector structure through bionics can improve the water collection capacity. However, due to the temperature and humidity factors generating fog and dew, the water collection capacity cannot be fundamentally improved. The application scope of fog and dew collection is also smaller than the condensation and adsorption and desorption atmospheric water harvesting technologies. Introducing energy into dew and fog water collection systems can improve water uptake and overcome the influence of unfavorable temperature and humidity conditions. Guan et al. [70] enhanced dew formation through artificial refrigeration, improving the water collection efficiency of the Teflon water collection panel by 45% and the aluminum water collection panel by 150%. Peng et al. [71] combined the cactus thorn structure with a magnetically induced flexible conical array, which can automatically and continuously capture fog water under the action of an external magnetic field under windless conditions. The water can be transported from the tip of the thorn to the bottom under the action of Laplace pressure, overcoming the difficulty of collecting water in static fog. Damak et al. [72] used electric field force to overcome aerodynamic resistance, introduced space charge into the fog through an ion emitter, made the fog droplets carry a net charge, and attracted them into the collector with an external electric field.
Table 3 summarizes the features and parameters of the selected active fog-dew water harvesting systems mentioned above. The mentioned researches are all experimental research. The performance of the device is measured under different working conditions. In general, the water collection performance of the device is 0.7–24 L/m2/h.
The performance influencing factors and ways of influencing each atmospheric water harvesting technology are summarized in Table 4. There are many factors affecting the water uptake by condensation and the adsorption and desorption water uptake. (1) The environmental temperature and humidity and how to reduce the temperature of the condensation surface have a great impact on the efficiency of the water uptake by condensation. (2) The major influence on adsorption and desorption water uptake is how to achieve multiple adsorption/desorption cycles in a day. (3) The research focus of active dew and fog water collection is to achieve fog water collection in calm conditions and introduce external energy to improve dew collection.
There are more than ten manufacturers providing atmospheric water uptake devices in the market, such as Watergen [75], FND [76], SOURCE [77], Atlantis Solar [78], Drinkableair Technologies [79], etc. SuntoWater [80], an adsorption-based atmospheric water uptake device, uses solar energy, forced convection of a ventilator, and condensation after adsorbent heating and desorption. It can work under the condition that the ambient humidity is only 10%, producing 30 L of water a day, and the energy consumption for water uptake is 1.25 L/kWh. Another water uptake device named WEDEW [81] is powered by biomass, with a power of 25 kWh and a water uptake energy consumption of 3.33 L/kWh. Rainmaker [82] uses wind energy to make water. One water uptake unit can make 5000, 10,000, or 20,000 L of water a day, with power ranging from 25 kW to 100 kW. Some products also use power grids, solar energy, and generators to supply energy. However, there is still a long way to go from commercial publicity to actual household use. Bagheri [83] tested three types of household atmospheric water uptake devices with a nominal capacity of 30 L/day and a power of 1500 W. Results show that the actual energy consumption of the device was 1.02 kWh/L and 6.23 kWh/L respectively in warm humid and low-temperature humid environments, which is different from the performance advertised by the manufacturer. At present, the atmospheric water uptake device has not been widely seen by the public. It is still necessary to improve the actual performance of the device, reduce its water uptake energy consumption, and make it a more economical drinking water source than the traditional water source.

5. Conclusions

Atmospheric water is a potential renewable water source with huge reserves. This study analyzed the energy consumption of two major atmospheric water harvesting technologies, condensation and adsorption, as well as the application prospect of “Trading-in Energy for Water.”
As for water harvesting by condensation, its water uptake performance and application scenarios are expected to be further expanded with an in-depth understanding of the factors affecting its performance [30,40]. The optimization of the system structure [23,37,84] and the development of new air humidification [35] and air concentration [36] technologies. For adsorption and desorption water harvesting technology, more research shifts the focus from improving the water absorption performance of the adsorbent to the heat transfer and system design. For example, the photothermal adsorbent improves the heat transfer performance of the adsorbent [54,55], the reflector improves the use of solar energy [85,86], and the condensation is enhanced to improve the water vapor condensation rate. It is expected to achieve efficient and continuous water uptake and improve energy utilization.
The atmospheric water harvesting technology has significant advantages in the open-source of water resources due to its wide applicability, guaranteed water volume, and sustainability. Atmospheric water harvesting technology can also improve the utilization rate of renewable energy and promote the development of energy technology. There is a lot of renewable energy, and there are a lot of water shortage areas in the world. Atmospheric water harvesting technology is expected to alleviate energy waste and water shortage, promote economic development, and conform to the concept of sustainable development. The limited refrigeration technology, air humidification technology, as well as the absence of highly efficient adsorbents are the main bottlenecks that are factors limiting the generation of presented technologies. The solution to these problems will help atmospheric water harvesting to become an economical daily drinking water source.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, H.-J.L. and J.Q.; methodology, H.-J.L. and J.Q.; software, H.-J.L.; validation, H.-J.L., L.C. and F.-F.L.; formal analysis, H.-J.L. and L.C.; investigation, H.-J.L., L.C., P.S. and F.-F.L.; resources, F.-F.L. and J.Q.; data curation, H.-J.L.; writing—original draft preparation, H.-J.L.; writing—review and editing, F.-F.L.; visualization, H.-J.L. and F.-F.L.; supervision, J.Q.; project administration, J.Q.; funding acquisition, F.-F.L. and J.Q. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant Nos. 91847302, 51979276; the Key R&D program of the Science and Technology Department of Tibet under Grant No. XZ202101ZY0003G; the “Smart Eye Action” under Grant No. WB2022-012; Open Research Fund Program of State Key Laboratory of Hydroscience and Engineering under Grant No. sklhse-2021-B-06.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Mekonnen, M.M.; Hoekstra, A.Y. Four billion people facing severe water scarcity. Sci. Adv. 2016, 2, e1500323. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  2. Hoekstra, A.Y.; Mekonnen, M.M.; Chapagain, A.K.; Mathews, R.E.; Richter, B.D. Global monthly water scarcity: Blue water footprints versus blue water availability. PLoS ONE 2012, 7, e32688. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  3. Huan, S.; Liu, X. Development status of global seawater desalination industry and dynamically comparative analysis of its production cost. IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Environ. Sci. 2021, 772, 12085. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. Gude, V.G. Desalination and sustainability—An appraisal and current perspective. Water Res. 2016, 89, 87–106. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  5. Delene, D.; Shamrukh, M. Investing in Rainfall Enhancement: An Innovative Plan for Arid Regions. In Proceedings of the Qatar Foundation Annual Research Conference Proceedings, Doha, Qatar, 22–23 March 2016; Volume 2016. Issue 1. [Google Scholar]
  6. Junde, W.; Yanzhao, J.; Xiaojuan, T. Study on Analysis of Risk for Rainwater Collection and Utilization for Rural Safe Drinking Water Project. IOP Conf. Ser. Mater. Sci. Eng. 2020, 780, 72040. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Khanal, G.; Thapa, A.; Devkota, N.; Paudel, U.R. A review on harvesting and harnessing rainwater: An alternative strategy to cope with drinking water scarcity. Water Supply 2020, 20, 2951–2963. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Bass, D.A.; McFadden, B.R.; Costanigro, M.; Messer, K.D. Implicit and Explicit Biases for Recycled Water and Tap Water. Water Resour. Res. 2022, 58, e2021WR030712. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Yang, G.; Gong, M.; Zheng, X.; Lin, L.; Fan, J.; Liu, F.; Meng, J. A review of microbial corrosion in reclaimed water pipelines: Challenges and mitigation strategies. Water Pract. Technol. 2022, 17, 731–748. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Person, M.; Sazeed, N. Continental Brackish Groundwater Resources. In Unconventional Water Resources; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2022; pp. 111–128. [Google Scholar]
  11. Zhang, D.; Xie, X.; Wang, T.; Wang, B.; Pei, S. Research on Water Resources Allocation System Based on Rational Utilization of Brackish Water. Water 2022, 14, 948. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Liu, C.; Liang, L.; Wang, L.; Zheng, S. Allocation and Utilization of Coal Mine Water for Ecological Protection of Lakes in Semi-Arid Area of China. Sustainability 2022, 14, 9042. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  13. Zhang, N.; He, H.; Guo, X.; Li, S.; Ni, S.; Peng, Y. Research on the development and utilization mode of mine water resources. IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Environ. Sci. 2019, 384, 12004. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  14. Oki, T.; Kanae, S. Global hydrological cycles and world water resources. Science 2006, 313, 1068–1072. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  15. Van der Ent, R.J.; Tuinenburg, O.A. The residence time of water in the atmosphere revisited. Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci. 2017, 21, 779–790. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  16. Kaseke, K.F.; Wang, L. Fog and Dew as Potable Water Resources: Maximizing Harvesting Potential and Water Quality Concerns. Geohealth 2018, 2, 327–332. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. World Meteorological Organization (WMO). International Meteorological Vocabulary (WMO-No. 182); Secretariat of the World Meteorological Organization: Geneva, Switzerland, 1992; pp. 182, 784. [Google Scholar]
  18. Wu, H.T. A simple algorithm for calculating water content and enthalpy in air. Chem. Eng. Des. 1990, 2, 28–30. (In Chinese) [Google Scholar]
  19. Maleki, M.; Eslamian, S.; Hamouda, B. Principles and Applications of Atmospheric Water Harvesting; John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.: Hoboken, NJ, USA, 2021; pp. 243–259. [Google Scholar]
  20. Li, Q.; Hao, X.Y. A review on extracting water from air. Shanxi Archit. 2016, 42, 124–126. (In Chinese) [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Kim, H.; Rao, S.R.; Kapustin, E.A.; Zhao, L.; Yang, S.; Yaghi, O.M.; Wang, E.N. Adsorption-based atmospheric water harvesting device for arid climates. Nat. Commun. 2018, 9, 1191. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  22. Zhang, M.; Liu, R.; Li, Y. Diversifying Water Sources with Atmospheric Water Harvesting to Enhance Water Supply Resilience. Sustainability 2022, 14, 7783. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  23. Humphrey, J.H.; Brown, J.; Cumming, O.; Evans, B.; Howard, G.; Kulabako, R.N.; Lamontagne, J.; Pickering, A.J.; Wang, E.N. The potential for atmospheric water harvesting to accelerate household access to safe water. Lancet Planet Health 2020, 4, e91–e92. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  24. Rao, A.K.; Fix, A.J.; Yang, Y.C.; Warsinger, D.M. Thermodynamic limits of atmospheric water harvesting. Energy Environ. Sci. 2022, 15, 4025–4037. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Gido, B.; Friedler, E.; Broday, D.M. Assessment of atmospheric moisture harvesting by direct cooling. Atmos. Res. 2016, 182, 156–162. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Magnus Formula. Available online: https://baike.baidu.com/item/%E9%A9%AC%E6%A0%BC%E7%BA%B3%E6%96%AF%E5%85%AC%E5%BC%8F/144125?fr=aladdin (accessed on 19 December 2022). (In Chinese).
  27. Dew Point. Available online: https://www.chemeurope.com/en/encyclopedia/Dew_point.html (accessed on 19 December 2022).
  28. Jin, Y.; Soukane, S.; Ghaffour, N. Salt-solution-infused thin-film condenser for simultaneous anti-frost and solar-assisted atmospheric water harvesting. Cell Rep. Phys. Sci. 2021, 2, 100568. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Yuan, S. Research of Water Harvesting Performance of Water Harvesting Device Based on Condensation Surface with Microstructures. Master’s Thesis, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin, China, 2018. (In Chinese). [Google Scholar]
  30. Yu, P.K. Design and Optimization of Semiconductor Atmospheric Water Generator. Master’s Thesis, Hefei University of Technology, Hefei, China, 2020. (In Chinese). [Google Scholar]
  31. Lin, Y.C.; Pei, W.L.; Sun, R.X.; Gao, C.L.; Chen, J.P.; Zheng, Y.M. Droplet Condensation on Surfaces with Special Wettability. Chem. J. Chin. Univ. 2019, 40, 1236–1241. (In Chinese) [Google Scholar]
  32. Zamuruyev, K.O.; Bardaweel, H.K.; Carron, C.J.; Kenyon, N.J.; Brand, O.; Delplanque, J.-P.; Davis, C.E. Continuous Droplet Removal upon Dropwise Condensation of Humid Air on a Hydrophobic Micropatterned Surface. Langmuir 2014, 30, 10133–10142. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  33. Hand, C.T.; Peuker, S. An experimental study of the influence of orientation on water condensation of a thermoelectric cooling heatsink. Heliyon 2019, 5, e02752. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  34. Tsutomu, H.; Kotaro, T.; Kenji, T.; Yasunari, a.M. Development of Novel Water-extraction System with Thermoelectric Module Using Solar and Wind Power in Arid Land. J. Northeast. Agric. Univ. 2010, 17, 37–42. [Google Scholar]
  35. Tu, R.; Hwang, Y. Performance analyses of a new system for water harvesting from moist air that combines multi-stage desiccant wheels and vapor compression cycles. Energy Convers. Manag. 2019, 198, 111811. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  36. Zhao, B.; Wang, L.-Y.; Chung, T.-S. Enhanced membrane systems to harvest water and provide comfortable air via dehumidification & moisture condensation. Sep. Purif. Technol. 2019, 220, 136–144. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Eslami, M.; Tajeddini, F.; Etaati, N. Thermal analysis and optimization of a system for water harvesting from humid air using thermoelectric coolers. Energy Convers. Manag. 2018, 174, 417–429. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Liu, J.; Zang, R.; Zhao, D.; Ji, W.; Zhang, Z. Study on properties of water extraction from air system. Refrigeration 2015, 43, 71–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  39. Peeters, R.; Vanderschaeghe, H.; Rongé, J.; Martens, J.A. Energy performance and climate dependency of technologies for fresh water production from atmospheric water vapour. Environ. Sci. Water Res. Technol. 2020, 6, 2016–2034. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  40. Zhang, R.; Zang, R.; Liu, J. Study on properties of water extraction from cooled air system under all operating conditions. Refrigeration 2016, 44, 51–55. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  41. Chaitanya, B.; Bahadur, V.; Thakur, A.D.; Raj, R. Biomass-gasification-based atmospheric water harvesting in India. Energy 2018, 165, 610–621. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  42. Ozkan, O.; Wikramanayake, E.D.; Bahadur, V. Modeling humid air condensation in waste natural gas-powered atmospheric water harvesting systems. Appl. Therm. Eng. 2017, 118, 224–232. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  43. Salehi, A.A.; Ghannadi-Maragheh, M.; Torab-Mostaedi, M.; Torkaman, R.; Asadollahzadeh, M. A review on the water-energy nexus for drinking water production from humid air. Renew. Sustain. Energy Rev. 2020, 120, 109627. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  44. Wikramanayake, E.D.; Bahadur, V. Flared natural gas-based onsite atmospheric water harvesting (AWH) for oilfield operations. Environ. Res. Lett. 2016, 11, 34024. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  45. Wikramanayake, E.D.; Ozkan, O.; Bahadur, V. Landfill gas-powered atmospheric water harvesting for oilfield operations in the United States. Energy 2017, 138, 647–658. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  46. Assessment and Analysis of New Energy Electricity Consumption in China. Available online: http://www.chinapower.com.cn/zx/hyfx/20220315/138719.html (accessed on 19 December 2022). (In Chinese).
  47. Patel, J.; Patel, K.; Mudgal, A.; Panchal, H.; Sadasivuni, K.K. Experimental investigations of atmospheric water extraction device under different climatic conditions. Sustain. Energy Technol. Assess. 2020, 38, 100677. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  48. Kim, H.; Rao, S.R.; LaPotin, A.; Lee, S.; Wang, E.N. Thermodynamic analysis and optimization of adsorption-based atmospheric water harvesting. Int. J. Heat Mass Transf. 2020, 161, 120253. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  49. Siegel, N.; Conser, B. A Techno-Economic Analysis of Solar-Driven Atmospheric Water Harvesting. J. Energy Resour. Technol. 2020, 143, 90907. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  50. Liu, Y.F.; Wang, R.Z.; Xia, Z.Z. Continuous Cycle Unit for Extracting Water from Air. J. Chem. Ind. Eng. 2004, 55, 1002–1005. (In Chinese) [Google Scholar]
  51. Wu, Q.; Su, W.; Li, Q.; Tao, Y.; Li, H. Enabling Continuous and Improved Solar-Driven Atmospheric Water Harvesting with Ti(3)C(2)-Incorporated Metal-Organic Framework Monoliths. ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2021, 13, 38906–38915. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  52. Xu, J.; Li, T.; Yan, T.; Wu, S.; Wu, M.; Chao, J.; Huo, X.; Wang, P.; Wang, R. Ultrahigh solar-driven atmospheric water production enabled by scalable rapid-cycling water harvester with vertically aligned nanocomposite sorbent. Energy Environ. Sci. 2021, 14, 5979–5994. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  53. Qi, H.; Wei, T.; Zhao, W.; Zhu, B.; Liu, G.; Wang, P.; Lin, Z.; Wang, X.; Li, X.; Zhang, X.; et al. An Interfacial Solar-Driven Atmospheric Water Generator Based on a Liquid Sorbent with Simultaneous Adsorption-Desorption. Adv. Mater. 2019, 31, e1903378. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  54. Li, R.; Shi, Y.; Wu, M.; Hong, S.; Wang, P. Improving atmospheric water production yield: Enabling multiple water harvesting cycles with nano sorbent. Nano Energy 2020, 67, 104255. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  55. Mulchandani, A.; Malinda, S.; Edberg, J.; Westerhoff, P. Sunlight-driven atmospheric water capture capacity is enhanced by nano-enabled photothermal desiccants. Environ. Sci. Nano 2020, 7, 2584–2594. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  56. Terzis, A.; Ramachandran, A.; Wang, K.; Asheghi, M.; Goodson, K.E.; Santiago, J.G. High-Frequency Water Vapor Sorption Cycling Using Fluidization of Metal-Organic Frameworks. Cell Rep. Phys. Sci. 2020, 1, 100057. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  57. Park, H.; Haechler, I.; Schnoering, G.; Ponte, M.D.; Schutzius, T.M.; Poulikakos, D. Enhanced Atmospheric Water Harvesting with Sunlight-Activated Sorption Ratcheting. ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2022, 14, 2237–2245. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  58. Hanikel, N.; Prevot, M.S.; Fathieh, F.; Kapustin, E.A.; Lyu, H.; Wang, H.; Diercks, N.J.; Glover, T.G.; Yaghi, O.M. Rapid Cycling and Exceptional Yield in a Metal-Organic Framework Water Harvester. ACS Cent Sci. 2019, 5, 1699–1706. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  59. Sun, J.; An, B.; Zhang, K.; Xu, M.; Wu, Z.; Ma, C.; Li, W.; Liu, S. Moisture-indicating cellulose aerogels for multiple atmospheric water harvesting cycles driven by solar energy. J. Mater. Chem. A 2021, 9, 24650–24660. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  60. Wang, W.; Pan, Q.; Xing, Z.; Liu, X.; Dai, Y.; Wang, R.; Ge, T. Viability of a practical multicyclic sorption-based water harvester with improved water yield. Water Res. 2021, 211, 118029. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  61. Asim, N.; Badiei, M.; Alghoul, M.A.; Mohammad, M.; Samsudin, N.A.; Amin, N.; Sopian, K. Sorbent-based air water-harvesting systems: Progress, limitation, and consideration. Rev. Environ. Sci. Bio/Technol. 2020, 20, 257–279. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  62. LaPotin, A.; Kim, H.; Rao, S.R.; Wang, E.N. Adsorption-Based Atmospheric Water Harvesting: Impact of Material and Component Properties on System-Level Performance. Acc. Chem. Res. 2019, 52, 1588–1597. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  63. Wang, W.W.; Ge, T.S.; Dai, Y.J.; Wang, R.Z.; Xie, S.T. Status of Solar-driven Sorption-based Atmosphere Water Harvesting. Sol. Energy 2020, 1, 33–46. (In Chinese) [Google Scholar]
  64. Zhao, H.Z.; Lei, M.; Huang, T.H.; Liu, T.; Zhang, M. A review on the development of water extraction from atmospheric air. Appl. Chem. Ind. 2020, 49, 414–419+425. (In Chinese) [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  65. Zhou, X.; Lu, H.; Zhao, F.; Yu, G. Atmospheric Water Harvesting: A Review of Material and Structural Designs. ACS Mater. Lett. 2020, 2, 671–684. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  66. Liu, J.Y.; Wang, L.W.; Wang, J.Y.; Wang, R.Z. Alternative of Sorbents and Heat Storage Materials for Heat Storage Sorption Air Intake. J. Refrig. 2018, 39, 74–79+98. (In Chinese) [Google Scholar]
  67. Lord, J.; Thomas, A.; Treat, N.; Forkin, M.; Bain, R.; Dulac, P.; Behroozi, C.H.; Mamutov, T.; Fongheiser, J.; Kobilansky, N.; et al. Global potential for harvesting drinking water from air using solar energy. Nature 2021, 598, 611–617. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  68. Zhuang, S.; Qi, H.; Wang, X.; Li, X.; Liu, K.; Liu, J.; Zhang, H. Advances in Solar-Driven Hygroscopic Water Harvesting. Glob. Chall. 2021, 5, 2000085. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  69. Zhang, W.; Xia, Y.; Wen, Z.; Han, W.; Wang, S.; Cao, Y.; He, R.X.; Liu, Y.; Chen, B. Enhanced adsorption-based atmospheric water harvesting using a photothermal cotton rod for freshwater production in cold climates. RSC Adv. 2021, 11, 35695–35702. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  70. Guan, H.; Sebben, M.; Bennett, J. Radiative- and artificial-cooling enhanced dew collection in a coastal area of South Australia. Urban Water J. 2013, 11, 175–184. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  71. Peng, Y.; He, Y.; Yang, S.; Ben, S.; Cao, M.; Li, K.; Liu, K.; Jiang, L. Magnetically Induced Fog Harvesting via Flexible Conical Arrays. Adv. Funct. Mater. 2015, 25, 5967–5971. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  72. Damak, M.; Varanasi, K.K. Electrostatically driven fog collection using space charge injection. Sci. Adv. 2018, 4, eaao5323. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  73. Cruzat, D.; Jerez-Hanckes, C. Electrostatic fog water collection. J. Electrost. 2018, 96, 128–133. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  74. Sharifvaghefi, S.; Kazerooni, H. Fog harvesting: Combination and comparison of different methods to maximize the collection efficiency. SN Appl. Sci. 2021, 3, 516. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  75. Watergen. Water from Air. Available online: https://www.watergen.com/ (accessed on 30 December 2022).
  76. Air Water Machine. Available online: http://www.fndtech.com/ (accessed on 30 December 2022). (In Chinese).
  77. Renewable Drinking Water|SOURCE Water. Available online: https://www.source.co/ (accessed on 30 December 2022).
  78. Atlantis Solar Environmental Products. Available online: http://www.atlantissolar.com/ (accessed on 30 December 2022).
  79. Pure & Sustainable Water—Drinkableair Technologies. Available online: https://drinkableair.tech/ (accessed on 30 December 2022).
  80. SunToWater Water Generator. Making Water from Air. Available online: http://suntowater.com/ (accessed on 19 December 2022).
  81. WEDEW-SkySource. Available online: https://www.skysource.org/wedew (accessed on 19 December 2022).
  82. Rainmaker Air-to-Water Technologies. Available online: https://rainmakerww.com/technology-air-to-water/ (accessed on 19 December 2022).
  83. Bagheri, F. Performance investigation of atmospheric water harvesting systems. Water Resour. Ind. 2018, 20, 23–28. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  84. Ferwati, M.S. Water harvesting cube. SN Appl. Sci. 2019, 1, 779. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  85. Elashmawy, M.; Alshammari, F. Atmospheric water harvesting from low humid regions using tubular solar still powered by a parabolic concentrator system. J. Clean. Prod. 2020, 256, 120329. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  86. Srivastava, S.; Yadav, A. Extraction of water particles from atmospheric air through a Scheffler reflector using different solid desiccants. Int. J. Ambient. Energy 2018, 41, 1357–1369. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Figure 1. Schematic diagram of atmospheric water harvesting systems based on condensation.
Figure 1. Schematic diagram of atmospheric water harvesting systems based on condensation.
Water 15 00878 g001
Figure 2. Hc, the ratio of energy consumption to water mass harvested by the condensation method.
Figure 2. Hc, the ratio of energy consumption to water mass harvested by the condensation method.
Water 15 00878 g002
Figure 3. Qw, the ratio of energy consumption to reach saturation to total energy consumption.
Figure 3. Qw, the ratio of energy consumption to reach saturation to total energy consumption.
Water 15 00878 g003
Figure 4. Qm, the ratio of energy consumption by single-stage to energy consumption by multi-stage.
Figure 4. Qm, the ratio of energy consumption by single-stage to energy consumption by multi-stage.
Water 15 00878 g004
Figure 5. Schematic diagram of atmospheric water harvesting systems based on adsorption/desorption cycles.
Figure 5. Schematic diagram of atmospheric water harvesting systems based on adsorption/desorption cycles.
Water 15 00878 g005
Figure 6. Relationship between energy consumption per unit water and independent variables of adsorption and desorption water harvesting.
Figure 6. Relationship between energy consumption per unit water and independent variables of adsorption and desorption water harvesting.
Water 15 00878 g006
Table 1. Features and parameters of selected atmospheric water harvesting systems based on condensation.
Table 1. Features and parameters of selected atmospheric water harvesting systems based on condensation.
Water Uptake ModeFeaturesWorking ConditionPerformanceResearch Type
Single-stageVaried working conditions [30]RH = 60–90%, ambient temperature at 24 °C, airflow= 30–70 m3/h0.14–0.41 L/kWhExperiment
Thermoelectric cooler array, air channel [37]Ambient temperature at 318 K, RH = 75%1.3 L/kWhSimulation
Multi-stageMulti-stage water harvesting unit [34]Ambient temperature at 20 °C, air moisture content = 8.7 g/kg0.16 L/kWhExperiment
Multi-stage dehumidification wheel, air humidification [35]Ambient temperature at 10 °C, air moisture content = 5 g/kg or Ambient temperature at 20 °C, air moisture content = 6 g/kg10.3–27.3 L/kWhSimulation
Enhanced membrane system [36]Vacuum pressure = 0.17 bar, inlet air moisture content= 24.3 g/m3, outlet air moisture content= 15.5 g/m35.24 L/kWhSimulation
Table 2. Features and parameters of selected atmospheric water harvesting systems with multi-adsorption-desorption cycles.
Table 2. Features and parameters of selected atmospheric water harvesting systems with multi-adsorption-desorption cycles.
Water Uptake ModeFeaturesWorking ConditionPerformance
Multi adsorption/desorption cycleTwo adsorbers, alternating adsorption and desorption [50]Temperature at 22.2 °C and RH = 44%; temperature at 10.4 °C and RH = 77%0.0485–0.089 L/kg/h, 4 h for one cycle
Liquid sorbent, moisture diffusion [53]RH = 80%0.5 L/m2/h, 2.8 L/m2/day
Flippable adsorbent stage [51]RH = 20%, ambient temperature at 298 K0.058 L/kg/h, one hour for one cycle
Vertically aligned and hierarchical pores [52]Ambient temperature at 30 °C2.12 L/kg/day, eight cycles per day
Rapid adsorption and subsequent desorption steps [57]Ambient temperature at 23 °C, RH = 69%, solar radiation = 1 kW/m20.2545 L/kg/h, one cycle for 46 min
Nano vapor sorbent [54]RH = 60%, solar radiation = 1 kW/m21.6 L/kg/day, 3 cycles a day
Nano-enabled
photothermal desiccants [55]
RH = 40%0.039 L/kg/h, 10 cycles per day
Fluidized
metal-organic frameworks [56]
RH = 18–39%0.33–0.52 L/kg/h, 40–55 cycles per day
MOF-303 [58]RH = 10–32%, ambient temperature at 27 °C0.7–1.3 L/kg/day
Moisture-indicated Cellulose Aerogels [59]RH = 25–85%2.81 L/kg/day, 3 cycles per day
Scaled-up device [60]RH = 20–90%0.42 L/kg/day, 2 cycles per day
Table 3. Features and parameters of selected active fog-dew water harvesting systems.
Table 3. Features and parameters of selected active fog-dew water harvesting systems.
Water Uptake ModeFeaturesWorking ConditionPerformance
Active dew collectionEnhanced by artificial cooling [70]Ambient temperature at 5.7–11.9 °C, RH at 70.1–95.1%Enhancement of 45% and 150% for Teflon and aluminum collectors, respectively
Active fog collectionMagnetically responsive
flexible conical arrays [71]
Ambient temperature at 27 °C, RH = 80%2 L/m2/h
Electrostatically driven [72]Voltage = 10 kV, RH = 100%24 L/m2/h,40 W/m2
Radial electric field [73]Voltage = 40 kV, air velocity = 2 m/s1.367 L/m2/h
Combining wires with electric field [74]Voltage = 25 kV, RH = 100%0.7–2.7 L/m2/h, 60 W/m2
Table 4. Performance influencing factors and influencing results of various atmospheric vapor harvesting technologies.
Table 4. Performance influencing factors and influencing results of various atmospheric vapor harvesting technologies.
Type of Atmospheric Water Harvesting Performance Influencing FactorsWays of InfluenceLifting Rate of Water Uptake Rate
Direct condensationAmbient temperatureHigh temperature is favorable for water harvestingIt determines whether there is condensate [39]
Relative humidityHigh relative humidity is favorable for water harvestingIt determines whether there is condensate
AirflowAffecting heat transfer and droplet removal, limited by cooling capacity28% [30], 50% [37]
Temperature of condensation surfaceLow temperature is better, limited by frostIt determines whether there is condensate [37]
Thermal conductivity of condensation surface materialHigh thermal conductivity is better, limited by frost-
Wetting characteristics of condensation surfaceAffecting heat transfer and the generation and removal of droplets, limited by other factors110% [31]
Installation angle of condensation surfaceAffecting droplet removal and system structure, limited by other factors680% [33]
RegeneratorReducing energy consumption-
Intelligent monitoring and controlImproving the environmental adaptability of the device and reducing energy consumption-
Adsorption and desorptionWater absorption rateAffecting water release at desorption stage4–6%
Adsorption/desorption speedAffecting the time of adsorption/desorption cyclesMultiplied by the times of absorption/desorption cycles
Desorption temperatureLow temperature, low energy consumption7–8%
Specific heat capacity of adsorption materialLow specific heat capacity, low energy consumption3%
Desorption heatLow desorption heat, low energy consumption15%
Regeneration stability of adsorbentAffecting long-term water harvesting-
Adsorption material costLow cost, good practicability-
Heat transfer performance of adsorption bedAffecting heat transfer efficiency-
Enhanced condensationImproving water vapor condensation rate-
Heat storageRespond to changes in energy supply and extend desorption time-
Active collection of fog and dewEnhanced by artificial-coolingImproving water collection rate45–150% [70]
Magnetically responsive
flexible conical arrays
Fog harvesting under windless conditionsIt determines whether there is water collected [71]
Electrostatically driven Fog harvesting under windless conditionsIt determines whether there is water collected [72]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Li, H.-J.; Cheng, L.; Sun, P.; Li, F.-F.; Qiu, J. Potential Analysis of Atmospheric Water Harvesting Technologies from the Perspective of “Trading-in Energy for Water”. Water 2023, 15, 878. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15050878

AMA Style

Li H-J, Cheng L, Sun P, Li F-F, Qiu J. Potential Analysis of Atmospheric Water Harvesting Technologies from the Perspective of “Trading-in Energy for Water”. Water. 2023; 15(5):878. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15050878

Chicago/Turabian Style

Li, Hou-Jun, Liang Cheng, Peng Sun, Fang-Fang Li, and Jun Qiu. 2023. "Potential Analysis of Atmospheric Water Harvesting Technologies from the Perspective of “Trading-in Energy for Water”" Water 15, no. 5: 878. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15050878

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop