Water in the Desert: pulling drinking water out of “nothing” (with chemistry doing the heavy lifting)
Water in the Desert: pulling drinking water out of “nothing” (with chemistry doing the heavy lifting) If you’ve ever stood in a desert and thought, “Lovely view. Shame about the whole ‘no water’ situation,” you’re not alone. The air does contain water vapour — even when it feels bone-dry — but grabbing it efficiently has always been the tricky bit. Enter Prof Omar Yaghi (University of California, Berkeley), the 2025 Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry, recognised for pioneering metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) — super-porous, molecular “scaffolds” built using reticular chemistry . In plain English: you design a material like LEGO at the molecular level, choosing the bits and connectors so it ends up full of tiny, tunable pores that can selectively trap molecules. So how does it harvest water? Yaghi’s approach uses these engineered porous materials to adsorb moisture from air (think: water sticking to internal surfaces), then release it when gently warmed. His company Atoco say...