Monday, June 8, 2026

Solar-powered desalinization device

 I want to know more about the MIT solar-powered desalinization system.

MIT researchers have developed two primary solar-powered desalination systems designed to produce low-cost drinking water without relying on grid electricity. The first is a passive solar thermal system that mimics ocean currents to purify seawater without moving parts, while the second is an active electrodialysis system designed to adapt dynamically to solar variations to purify brackish groundwater without batteries. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

System 1: The Passive Seawater Evaporator (No Electricity) [1, 2]
Developed by engineers from MIT and Shanghai Jiao Tong University, this device converts seawater into drinking water using only direct solar heat, eliminating the need for electricity, pumps, or filters. [1, 2]
  • Thermohaline Convection: The system avoids the classic desalination pitfall of salt clogging by utilizing natural circulation. It is slightly tilted, allowing water to create miniature currents. As water evaporates, the remaining dense, hyper-salty water sinks to the bottom, naturally flushing the salt out. [1, 2, 3]
  • Hydrophobic Membrane: Sunlight heats a thin layer of seawater in an insulated chamber. The water turns into pure vapor, which passes through a specialized membrane that allows gas through but blocks liquid water and impurities. [1]
  • High Efficiency & Low Cost: Built using inexpensive household materials like dark absorbers and clear insulation covers, it captures condensation energy to boost output. [1, 2]
  • Water Output: Scaled to the size of a small carry-on suitcase, it can produce 4 to 6 liters of fresh drinking water per hour. [1, 2]
System 2: The Battery-Free Electrodialysis Plant (No Grid)
Developed by MIT’s Global Engineering and Research (GEAR) Center, this community-scale system is engineered to purify brackish groundwater in inland, off-grid areas. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • Electric Field Separation: Rather than boiling water, this system passes brackish water through a stack of ion-exchange membranes. An electric field is used to pull salt ions away from the freshwater stream. [1]
  • "Sun-Rhythm" Automation: Traditional solar-powered setups require a massive bank of backup batteries to keep the process steady when clouds pass by. This system solves the problem by updating its calculations 3 to 5 times per second, shifting its power consumption up or down in real-time to match the exact output of its solar panels. [1, 2, 3]
  • Battery-Free Operation: Because it responds instantly to shifts in sunlight, it eliminates the cost and maintenance overhead of energy storage batteries. [1, 2]
  • Water Output: Tested in a 6-month trial in New Mexico, the system successfully utilized over 94%
  • of the solar panels' generated electrical energy to produce up to 5,000 liters of fresh water per day. [1, 2]


Neither of the MIT solar-powered desalination systems are available for direct commercial purchase yet, as both technologies are currently transitioning from the academic lab to market commercialization.
The availability status and path to market differ significantly for each system:
1. The Passive Seawater Evaporator (Suitcase-Sized)
  • Current Status: Advanced functional prototype stage. [1]
  • Commercial Strategy: The design intentionally decouples the solar absorber from the wicking materials to utilize cheap, readily available components (like commercial black solar absorbers and household insulation). Because it requires no sophisticated electronic infrastructure, the researchers intend for this to be manufactured as a low-cost, open-source or highly affordable consumer product for disaster-relief zones and coastal households. [1, 2, 3]
  • Timeline: Extensive testing on multi-stage configurations is wrapping up, but a consumer-packaged product is not yet listed on retail markets. [1]
2. The Battery-Free Electrodialysis Plant (Village-Scale)
  • Current Status: Field-tested pilot scale. [1]
  • Commercial Strategy: Following a highly successful 6-month field trial in New Mexico where it reliably cleared 5,000 liters of brackish water a day, MIT's GEAR Center engineers announced plans to launch a dedicated startup company to commercialize the technology. [1, 2]
  • Timeline: The engineering team is actively scaling the technology to support larger community footprints and municipal water infrastructures. Commercial deployments through their upcoming spin-off company will target industrial, agricultural, and community contracts rather than individual consumer sales. [1, 2]



Sunday, June 7, 2026

Artificial blood -- Made in Japan

 Japan's artificial blood?

Japanese researchers have successfully developed a universal, shelf-stable artificial blood substitute that eliminates the need for blood-type matching and refrigeration. Led by teams at Nara Medical University and Chuo University, the breakthrough utilizes hemoglobin vesicle (HbV) technology to mimic the oxygen-carrying capabilities of real red blood cells. Human clinical trials began evaluating its safety and efficacy, marking a major milestone in global emergency medicine. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Clinical trial on artificial blood cells to begin in Japan
Japanese scientists have unveiled a major medical innovation ...
How the Technology Works
  • Recycled Hemoglobin: Scientists extract hemoglobin—the vital oxygen-transporting protein—from donated human blood that has expired past its standard storage limit. [1, 2]
  • Synthetic Shells: The extracted hemoglobin is encapsulated inside nano-sized synthetic lipid membranes (vesicles). [1, 2]
  • Antigen Removal: Because these artificial cells lack the ABO and Rh blood-type antigens found on natural red blood cells, they do not trigger immune rejection. This makes the formulation truly universally compatible. [1, 2, 3]
  • Clotting Assist: Some advanced variants under development also incorporate synthetic platelets to assist with wound clotting during traumatic blood loss. [1, 2]
Key Strategic Advantages
  • Longer Shelf Life: Traditional donated red blood cells expire after just 42 days under strict refrigeration. This artificial blood remains viable for up to two years at room temperature and up to five years if frozen. [1, 2, 3]
  • Immediate Transfusions: Emergency responders can administer the fluid directly in ambulances, disaster zones, or remote regions without waiting for hospital blood-type testing. [1, 2]
  • Virus-Free Integrity: The rigorous manufacturing process ensures the fluid is entirely free from blood-borne pathogens and viral contamination risks. [1, 2]
Current Clinical Status and Timeline
  • 2022 Early Feasibility: Initial micro-dose testing in a small cohort of healthy volunteers confirmed the primary oxygen-carrying properties. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • Expanded Trials: Advanced Phase I clinical trials kicked off to test escalating doses between 100 mL and 400 mL in healthy human adults. The trials monitor potential minor adverse reactions, such as temporary mild fevers or rashes. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • 2030 Commercial Target: If safety data and subsequent large-scale efficacy tests prove successful, researchers project wide-scale hospital rollout and commercial availability. [1, 2]
Why Japan is Leading the Charge
The project is a strategic priority driven heavily by Japan's changing demographics. An aging population combined with a declining birth rate is rapidly shrinking the nation's available pool of young blood donors, threatening a severe structural deficit in the national healthcare supply. [1, 2, 3]

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Iran was forbidden to acquire gas masks in the past

 Was there a time when Iran was blocked from acquiring gas masks?

Yes, Iran was heavily restricted and effectively blocked from acquiring legitimate military-grade gas masks due to strict international weapons embargoes and sanctions during the Iran–Iraq War (1980–1988). [1]
Despite being subjected to massive, systematic Iraqi chemical weapons attacks—including mustard gas and nerve agents—the international community strictly enforced embargoes on Iran, treating defensive military equipment like gas masks as dual-use or restricted military goods. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
The Cost of the Embargo
Because Western nations and major suppliers blocked direct military sales to Iran, the country was completely unprepared for chemical warfare. This blockade forced Iran to rely on desperate, flawed alternatives: [1, 2]
  • Commercial Substitution: Iran had to bypass military channels to purchase commercial spray-painting respirators and goggles from the West, which offered little to no protection against deadly military gases. [1, 2]
  • Defective Foreign Purchases: In 1984, trying to circumvent the blockade, Iran purchased masks from South Korea (which didn't fit properly and had filters that failed after 15 minutes). They also bought 5,000 cheap units from East Germany that turned out to be completely useless industrial painting goggles rather than gas masks. [1]
  • Smuggling Components: By 1986, Iranian diplomats were forced to covertly travel across Europe just to buy active charcoal and filter models to try and figure out how to build their own defensive gear. They did not achieve domestic gas mask production until April 1988. [1]
Contemporary Sanctions Context
The precedent of blocking protective and medical equipment via broad sanctions has triggered modern controversies as well. For instance: [1]
  • The COVID-19 Pandemic: In 2020, Iranian officials publicly stated that sweeping U.S. financial sanctions disrupted their banking access, blocking the delivery of millions of protective respiratory face masks they had purchased from the United Kingdom to combat the virus. [1]