who is rain maker??

Sometimes ideas just pop up out of the blue. Or in Charlie Paton’s case out of the rain. “I was in a bus in Morocco travelling through the desert,“  he remembers. “It had been raining and the bus was full of hot, wet  people. The windows steamed up and I went to sleep with a towel against the glass. When I woke, the thing was soaking wet. I had to wring it out. And it set me thinking. Why was it so wet?”
The answer, of course, was condensation. Back home in London, a physicist friend, Philip Davies, explained that the glass, chilled by the rain outside, had cooled the hot humid air inside the bus below its dew point, causing droplets of water to form on the inside of the window. Intrigued, Paton –a lighting engineer by profession – started rigging up his own equipment. “I made my own solar stills. It occurred to me that you might be able to produce water i this way in the desert, simply by cooling the air. I wondered whether you could make enough to irrigate fields and grow crops.”
Local scientists, working with Paton under a licence from his Company Light Works, are watering the desert and growing vegetables in what is basically a giant dew-making machine that produces fresh water and cool air from sum and seawater. In awarding Paton first prize in a design competition two years ago, Macro Goldschmied,   president of the Royal Institute of British Architects, called it “a truly original ideas which has the potential to impact on the lives of millions of people living in coastal water-starved areas around the world.”
The design has three main parts (see Graphic). This greenhouse faces into the prevailing wind so that hot, dry desert air blows in through the front wall of perforated cardboard, kept wet and cool by a constant trickle of seawater pumped up from the nearly shoreline. The evaporating seawater cools and moistens the air. Last June, for example, when the temperature outside the Abu Dhabi greenhouse was 46 oC , it was in the low 30s inside. While the air outside was dry the humidity in the greenhouse was 90 percent. The cool, moist air allows the plants to grow faster, and because much less water evaporates from the leaves their demand for moisture drops dramatically. Paton’s crops thrived on a single litre of water per square meter per day, compared to 8 litres if they were growing outside.
The second feature also cools the air for the plants. Paton has constructed a double-layered roof with an outer layer of clear polythene and an inner, coated layer that reflect infrared light. Visible light can stream through to maximise photosynthesis, while heat from the infrared radiation is trapped in the space between the layers, away from the plants.
At the back of the greenhouse site the third element, the main water-production unit. Just before entering this unit, the humid air of the greenhouse mixes with the hot, dry air from between the two layers of the roof. This means the air can absorb more moisture as it passes through a second moist cardboard wall. Finally, the hot saturated air hits a condenser. This is a metal surface kept cool by still more seawater – the equivalent of the window on Pato’s Moroccan bus. Drops of pure distilled water from on the condenser and flow into a tank for irrigating the crops.
The greenhouse more or less runs itself. Sensors switch everything on when the sun rises and alter flows of air and seawater through the day in response to changes in temperature, humidity and sunlight. On windless days, fans ensure a constant flow of air through the greenhouse. “Once it is tuned t the local environment, you don’t need anyone there for it to work,” says Paton. “We can run the entire operation off one 13-amp plug, and in future we could make it entirely independent of the grid, powered from solar panels.”
The net effects is to evaporate seawater into hot desert air, then recognise the moisture as fresh water. At the same time, cool moist air flows through the greenhouse to provide ideal conditions for the crops. The key to the seawater greenhosue’s  potential is its unique combination of desalination and air conditioning. By tapping the power of the sun it can cool as efficiently as a 500 kilowatt air conditioner while using less than 3 kilowatts of electricity. In practice, it evaporates 3000 litres of seawater a day and turns it into about 800 litres of fresh water –just enough to irrigate the plants. The rest is lost as water vapour.
Critics point out that construction costs of £25 per square meter mean the water is twice as expensive as water from a conventional desalination plant. But the comparison is misleading, says Paton. The natural air conditioning in the greenhouse massively increases the value of that water. Because the plants need only an eight of the water used by those grown conventionally, the effective cost is only a quarter that of water from a standard desalinator. And costs should plummet when mass production begins, he adds. Best of all, the greenhouses should be environmentally friendly. “I suppose there might be aesthetic objections to large structures on coastal sites,” says Harris, “but it is a clean technology and doesn’t produce pollution or even large quantities of hot water.”


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