Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

New 3D-Printed Bikini Cleans Water As You Swim

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Oct, 2015 12:37 PM
    Want to help clean polluted water? It might be as easy as slipping on this bikini!
     
    Researchers have invented a new 3D-printed swimsuit capable of cleaning up oil spills and desalinising water while people swim.
     
    A material created by University of California, Riverside engineers is the key component of the swimsuit that won an international design competition for its ability to clean water as a person swims.
     
    The reusable material, which they call Sponge, is derived from heated sucrose, a form of sugar. It has a highly porous structure that is super hydrophobic, meaning it repels water, but also absorbs harmful contaminants.
     
    “This is a super material that is not harmful to the environment and very cost effective to produce,” said Mihri Ozkan, an electrical engineering professor at UC Riverside’s Bourns College of Engineering.
     
    Ozkan, along with fellow engineering professor, Cengiz Ozkan, current PhD student, Daisy Patino, and Hamed Bay, began developing the material about four years ago for applications such as cleaning up oil or chemical spills or desalinising water.
     
    They also believe the unique water-repelling nature of the material could be used in paint applied to airplanes and satellites or as part of electromagnetic shields for such things as unmanned aerial vehicles.
     
     
    The idea to incorporate the material into wearable technology, such as the swimsuit, came from Pinar Guvenc, Inanc Eray and Gonzalo Carbajo, partners of Eray Carbajo, an architecture and design firm based in New York City and Istanbul.
     
    The team visited the Ozkan’s labs and worked with them to design the swimsuit.
     
    The team’s design molds the Sponge material into the shape of a bikini and encapsulates it in a net-like cage made of 3D-printed elastomer that forms to the body.
     
    The material could also be incorporated into such things as bathing suits, swimming caps and wet suits.
     
    The Sponge material can absorb up to 25 times its own weight and it doesn’t release the absorbed materials unless it is heated at a temperature exceeding 1,000 degrees Celsius.
     
    The contaminants will be trapped in the inner pores of the sponge material, so they don’t touch the skin.
     
    After being used a number of times, the sponge pad can be replaced with a new pad and the old one can be recycled.
     
    Testing at the Ozkans’ UC Riverside labs showed that the Sponge material can be reused up to 20 times without losing its absorbency.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Childhood neglect may turn boys into violent adults

    Childhood neglect may turn boys into violent adults
    Parent may please take note that the cost of physically neglecting your male children could be very high: it may increase your risk of raising violent adolescents, says a study....

    Childhood neglect may turn boys into violent adults

    Daughters take care as you age

    Daughters take care as you age
    If you are blessed with a daughter, take heart because in your golden years, they are the ones - and not sons - who are going to care for you...

    Daughters take care as you age

    Men battle sexual temptations even after marriage

    Men battle sexual temptations even after marriage
    Even after they tie the knot and pledge not to cheat and observe sexual abstinence outside marriage, men, it turns out, often struggle with sexual temptations...

    Men battle sexual temptations even after marriage

    Why do some kids fear math?

    Why do some kids fear math?
    Are you one of those who used to detest math during childhood and often dreamed of growing up and doing anything but math? You may now have an answer...

    Why do some kids fear math?

    Sweet Job: Cambridge University Seeks Doctoral Student To Study The Fundamentals Of Chocolate

    Sweet Job: Cambridge University Seeks Doctoral Student To Study The Fundamentals Of Chocolate
    Cambridge University in England is seeking a doctoral student to pursue what sounds like the sweetest job in the world: studying the fundamentals of chocolate.

    Sweet Job: Cambridge University Seeks Doctoral Student To Study The Fundamentals Of Chocolate

    Woman Improves After Unknowingly Drinking Iced Tea Laced With Industrial Cleaner At Restaurant

    Woman Improves After Unknowingly Drinking Iced Tea Laced With Industrial Cleaner At Restaurant
    SALT LAKE CITY - A woman who unknowingly drank iced tea laced with an industrial cleaning solution at a Utah restaurant has whispered and gotten out of bed, her lawyer said Saturday.

    Woman Improves After Unknowingly Drinking Iced Tea Laced With Industrial Cleaner At Restaurant