Resumen:
A way of harvesting water from the air that avoids the discontinuity of the adsorption/
desorption cycles is theoretically analyzed. A rectangular prism-shaped adsorbent bed is
immersed in low-humidity air, at an angle to the horizontal and subject to a temperature
gradient between two opposite and open faces. The other four faces of the prism remain
isolated. Water is adsorbed on the adsorbent colder face, causing a density gradient in the
surrounding air, parallel to the surface, that results in a self-sustained continuous air flow.
On the opposite face, a self-sustained continuous air flow parallel to the surface also arises,
but this time due to a temperature gradient in the air surrounding the hot bed face. In addition,
its higher temperature causes the desorption of water from the adsorbent. This overall
water exchange produces the enrichment of water content in one of the air streams that is
crucial to produce water harvesting. The performance of Al-Fumarate, MOF-303, SAPO-
34 and Zeolite 13X is tested, unveiling the key factors that increase flow rate and water
concentration at the enriched phase. It has been found that the diffusive mass transport at
the air-solid interphase is the bottleneck of water harvesting in continuous flow conditions.
Therefore, if high concentration of water is desired, it is necessary to use porous materials
with very high diffusitivities. These findings provide the foundations for the design of continuous
water harvesting devices.