Island Sky develops technology for transforming water vapor from the atmosphere into potable water
Island Sky® Corp. USA has developed a patented technology for transforming water vapor from the atmosphere into potable water. More than one billion human beings lack access to clean water, according to the United Nations. The rest arguably pay too much for water infrastructure, transportation, and packaging.
“High-quality water is typically transported from springs, distilled, perhaps packaged, and transported again, leaving a considerable carbon footprint,” said Island Sky Vice President of Engineering George Dubois. “Our mission is to provide low cost, high-quality drinking water to people in every corner of the world and to supply critical emergency drinking water equipment to relief agencies for crisis areas where potable water is unavailable.”
Island Sky has developed two water-making products: Skywater® 14, a home/office model, and Skywater® 300, a larger outdoor model just entering mass production. The multipatented devices consist of more than 400 parts each, designed with SolidWorks® 3D CAD software, and produce as many as 1,100 liters per day.
Other green breakthroughs designed in SolidWorks include:
* The BigBelly® trash bin, the world’s only on-site solar-powered trash compactor;
* UV-light drinking water disinfection systems from Trojan Technologies;
* The Reee chair, a stackable chair made entirely from discarded video game consoles; and
* Whole-house systems designed by Greentec Systems featuring solar panels, air filtration units, under-floor heating, and other products that reduce dependence on oil, gas, or electricity.
“There’s an urgent demand for our products, as you might imagine, so development speed is of the essence,” George Dubois said. “SolidWorks is an excellent tool that helps us work very quickly. We conserve time, money, and material resources by carefully studying all our prototypes in SolidWorks so the first physical assembly works perfectly. Our team has a long and varied design resume, including aerospace and medical, and SolidWorks was simply the logical choice. Our manufacturing partners use SolidWorks, too, so communication is simple.”
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Related categories: Electronic and electrical waste recycling Environmental technologies for Residential and Green homes Solar power and photovoltaics Water conservation and supply


