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    • Zero mass water?
     
    November 29, 2017

    Zero mass water?

    News

    Interesting article in Forbes magazine, in which Zero Mass ​Water CEO Cody ​Friesen ​showcases his ​Source panels ​which extract ​water from the ​air.

    It’s ​often said you ​can’t ​make something ​out of nothing. ​Cody Friesen ​may have come ​as close to ​succeeding as ​anyone. ​

    To show me ​his technological ​sleight of hand,​ Friesen ​invites me to a ​hillside house ​in Berkeley, ​California on a ​sunny afternoon.​ There, in a ​shaded ​courtyard, we ​each sample a ​cup of water ​that flows from ​a drinking ​fountain. The ​water is cool ​and delicious ​– and it ​was made out of ​thin air. ​Literally. ​

    Nanomaterials ​– and ​physics, of ​course – ​played a role ​too. The drinking fountain is fed ​by a flexible ​pipe that leads ​to the ​house’s ​roof. There sit ​two Friesen’​s devices, ​called Source ​Hydropanels. ​Each looks like ​solar panel ​mounted atop a ​metal box. The ​system extracts ​moisture out of ​the air at a ​rate of as much ​as five liters ​per day. ​

    Friesen ​believes ​installations ​like this one ​could soon be ​providing clean,​ quality ​drinking water ​to homes, ​schools and ​businesses ​across the ​United States ​and beyond ​– and why ​not, to rural ​villages, ​desert towns or ​urban slums in ​the developing ​world. ​

    “Water ​stress is a ​human condition,​” says ​Friesen, who is ​founder and CEO ​of Zero Mass ​Water, the ​Arizona-based ​startup that ​makes Source. ​“We want ​to guarantee ​access to safe ​drinking water ​for every ​person in the ​world, and ​fundamentally ​change the ​human ​relationship to ​water.” ​

    Source is just for  drinking  water. ​The technology ​doesn’t ​generate enough ​volume to be ​viable for ​general home or ​industrial use, ​let alone for ​irrigation. And ​Zero Mass Water ​has a long way ​to go before it ​can prove ​it can turn ​Friesen’s ​cool tech into ​a viable ​business. ​

    But Friesen, ​a materials ​scientist and ​professor of ​engineering at ​Arizona State ​University, has ​already ​installed the ​Source in eight ​countries, ​including ​Ecuador, Jordan,​ Mexico and the ​Philippines. In ​the U.S., ​his panels are ​collecting ​water at a Duke ​Energy facility ​in North ​Carolina, an ​office building ​in Santa Monica,​ Calif., some ​Bay Area ​residences, and ​a handful of ​homes and ​schools in ​Arizona, where ​despite the low ​humidity, ​Source produces ​roughly the ​same amount of ​water as in ​wetter climates.​ Zero Mass, ​which has ​raised $24 ​million from ​investors, ​begins selling ​the Source ​commercially in ​the United ​States on ​Wednesday. ​

    Friesen’​s clean water ​doesn’t ​come cheap. A ​typical setup ​for a home will ​set you back ​about $4500 — $​2000 for each ​of two Sources ​and an ​additional $500 ​for installation.​ Friesen says ​for a household ​that regularly ​buys bottled ​water, payback ​will take ​about five ​years. ​Considering ​that Americans ​drank, on ​average, 40 ​gallons of ​bottled water ​last year, he ​sees plenty of ​potential ​customers. ​Friesen says ​that over its ​lifetime, a two-​panel set up ​may help to ​remove 70,000 ​plastic bottles ​from circulation.​

    But Friesen ​has a pitch and ​a plan to push ​Source well ​beyond homes. ​Consider a ​school ​that’s ​had issues with ​lead in its ​water. ​Installing an ​array of Source ​– say a ​dozen or two of ​the devices — ​could be ​cheaper than ​replacing ​decrepit ​infrastructure. ​Contamination ​doesn’t ​have to be on ​the scale of ​Flint, Michigan ​for the idea to ​make sense. ​Last year, the ​Los Angeles ​Unified School ​District, for ​example, spent ​nearly $20 ​million to ​retrofit or ​remove 48,000 ​contaminated ​drinking ​fountains. ​Zero Mass’ ​backers believe ​numbers like ​these point to ​Source’s ​viability not ​only for homes ​but also for ​institutions ​and organizations.​

    “In ​developed ​markets, Source ​can be a choice ​for consumers, ​much like ​renewable ​energy is,​” says ​Will Sarni, a ​hydrologist and ​veteran water ​industry ​consultant, who ​advises Friesen ​part-time. ​“It is ​absolutely a ​viable ​substitute that ​gets us away ​from capital-​intensive, ​centralized ​water systems.​” ​

    Source works something like this: It draws ​ambient air ​through a fan ​into its ​devices. There, ​special nano-​materials ​engineered by ​Zero Mass ​absorb the ​water through a ​process similar ​to what makes ​sugar in an ​open container ​clump with ​humidity. ​Similar, but highly concentrated, ​Friesen says. ​The solar panel ​then helps ​separate the ​water from the ​material. After ​it is condensed,​ it flows into ​a reservoir ​below the panel,​ where it runs ​through a ​mineral block ​that adds ​magnesium and ​calcium common ​in drinking ​water. ​

    Friesen says ​a typical solar ​power ​installation ​creates ​valuable, but ​somewhat ​intangible ​output. “​With us, you ​get to hold the ​result of that ​solar energy in ​a cup,” ​he says. “​It’s an ​unbelievable ​experience.​” ​

    Friesen, who ​is 39, grew up ​in the Sonoran ​desert in ​Arizona. He ​earned an ​undergraduate ​degree in ​materials ​science at ​Arizona State ​University and ​a Ph.D. in the ​same field at ​the Massachusetts ​Institute of ​Technology. In ​2007, he ​founded Fluidic ​Energy, which ​develops ​battery ​technology. ​

    His work on ​water led him ​to found Zero ​Mass in 2014. A ​year later, he ​was named to a ​Henry Crown ​Fellowship, a ​20-year-old ​program of the ​Aspen Institute ​that seeks to ​“develop ​the next ​generation of ​community-​spirited ​leaders.” ​Alumni of the ​program include ​the likes of ​Netflix founder ​and CEO Reed ​Hastings, ​LinkedIn ​founder Reid ​Hoffman and ​venture ​capitalist ​Ellen Pao. ​

    While in the ​program, ​Friesen met ​Aspen Institute ​fellow Skip ​Battle, a ​former tech ​exec who sits ​on the boards ​of Expedia, ​LinkedIn, ​Netflix, ​Workday and ​other companies.​

    “Cody ​comes in three ​years ago,​” Battle ​says. “​He’s ​going to get ​water out of ​the air. ​He’s done ​it Arizona. I ​said if he can ​do it there, he ​can surely get ​water out of ​the air in ​Kenya or ​Oakland.” ​

    Battle became ​an investor, ​joining ​Arnerich ​Massena’s ​3×5 Partners, a ​growth-oriented ​fund, Material ​Impact, a ​Boston-based ​firm, and ​others, who ​invested over ​three rounds of ​financing. ​

    “There ​is an awful lot ​of far from ​pure water ​being drunk in ​the United ​States,” ​says Battle, ​whose Berkeley ​house Freisen ​took me ​for the ​demonstration ​of Source. ​“And ​that’s ​not just in bad ​places. It ​would be so ​easy to include ​Source in any ​new construction.​”

    Tagged: nanotechnology, Solar

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