. Military Space News .
WATER WORLD
Drinking water, on demand and from air
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 16, 2019

"If the AWE program succeeds in providing troops with potable water even in arid climates, that gives commanders greater maneuver and decision space and allows operations to run longer," said Cohen. "Ultimately, the technology could even diminish the motivation for conflicts over resources by providing a new source of drinking water to stressed populations."

Providing potable drinking water to deployed troops operating in low resource or contested environments is no simple undertaking. Logistics teams face great risk delivering water and often incur what would otherwise be preventable casualties.

DARPA's new Atmospheric Water Extraction (AWE) program sets out to sharply reduce that risk by giving deployed units the technology to capture potable water on the spot from the air in quantities sufficient to meet daily needs of the warfighter, even in extremely dry areas of the world.

"The demand for drinking water is a constant across all Department of Defense missions, and the risk, cost, and complexity that go into meeting that demand can quickly become force limiting factors," said Seth Cohen, the AWE program manager.

"Right now, the military relies on purification of regional fresh and saline water sources, or transported bottled water, neither of which are optimal for mobile forces that operate with a small footprint. DARPA is turning to atmospheric water extraction as a potential solution that offers maximal operational flexibility with minimal risk."

The AWE program has two tracks. Researchers supporting the Expeditionary Track will target deliverables built around the daily potable water requirement for an individual, in a compact, portable form factor. Researchers on the Stabilization Track will develop technology that is transportable on a standard military vehicle and can support a company of up to 150 people.

DARPA is open to various approaches, with an emphasis on advanced sorbents that can rapidly extract water from ambient air and release it quickly with minimal energy inputs. These sorbent materials offer potential solutions to the AWE challenge, provided they can be produced at the necessary scale and remain stable over thousands of extraction cycles.

In addition to developing new sorbents, AWE researchers will need to engineer systems to optimize their suitability for highly mobile forces by substantially reducing the size, weight, and power requirements compared to existing technologies.

"If the AWE program succeeds in providing troops with potable water even in arid climates, that gives commanders greater maneuver and decision space and allows operations to run longer," said Cohen. "Ultimately, the technology could even diminish the motivation for conflicts over resources by providing a new source of drinking water to stressed populations."

DARPA is hosting a Proposers Day meeting on January 7, 2020, in Arlington, Virginia, to provide more information about AWE to interested researchers. Find out more here.

A forthcoming Broad Agency Announcement will include full program details. It will be posted here
Related Links
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics


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WATER WORLD
Water-scarce Gulf states bank on desalination, at a cost
Sur (Oman), Oman (AFP) Dec 11, 2019
"We have water, and it's the most important thing in a house," says Abdullah al-Harthi from the port city of Sur in Oman, a country that relies on desalination plants. But for Oman and the other Gulf countries dominated by vast and scorching deserts, obtaining fresh water from the sea comes at a high financial and environmental cost. In Sur, south of the capital Muscat, water for residents and businesses comes from a large desalination plant that serves some 600,000 people. "Before, life wa ... read more

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