US2398291A - Collapsible distillation apparatus - Google Patents

Collapsible distillation apparatus Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2398291A
US2398291A US504682A US50468243A US2398291A US 2398291 A US2398291 A US 2398291A US 504682 A US504682 A US 504682A US 50468243 A US50468243 A US 50468243A US 2398291 A US2398291 A US 2398291A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
sheet
layer
liquid
absorbent
container
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US504682A
Inventor
William R P Delano
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Gallowhur Chemical Corp
Original Assignee
Gallowhur Chemical Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Gallowhur Chemical Corp filed Critical Gallowhur Chemical Corp
Priority to US504682A priority Critical patent/US2398291A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2398291A publication Critical patent/US2398291A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/02Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by heating
    • C02F1/04Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by heating by distillation or evaporation
    • C02F1/14Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by heating by distillation or evaporation using solar energy
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/02Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by heating
    • C02F1/04Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by heating by distillation or evaporation
    • C02F1/18Transportable devices to obtain potable water
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02ATECHNOLOGIES FOR ADAPTATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02A20/00Water conservation; Efficient water supply; Efficient water use
    • Y02A20/20Controlling water pollution; Waste water treatment
    • Y02A20/208Off-grid powered water treatment
    • Y02A20/212Solar-powered wastewater sewage treatment, e.g. spray evaporation
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S203/00Distillation: processes, separatory
    • Y10S203/01Solar still
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S203/00Distillation: processes, separatory
    • Y10S203/18Control

Definitions

  • This invention relates in general to distillation and in particular to an apparatus for distilling liquids, in particular sea water, and to correlated improvements designed to render such an apparatus collapsible and portable.
  • the device must have a relatively low weight per unit of capacity.
  • the device must becompact and occupy a small space when not in use.
  • the device must be resistant to corrosion by sun, air, water and the action of the salts contained in sea water.
  • the device should be easy to erect and simple to operate.
  • the apparatus should be capable of being fabricated without the use of critical or scarce war material.
  • the device should operate upon a source of cheap, plentiful fuel without the use of an open flame which would create a fire hazard.
  • the fresh water produced should be free of salts, of harmful bacteria and should be substantially odorless and tasteless.
  • an apparatus for distilling liquids comprising, the combination of, a sheet of spring metal adapted to coil about itself, a layer of absorbent material united to the inner surface of the metal sheet, means extending from the ends of the coiled sheet for saturating the .layer with the liquid to be distilled, a window comprising a transparent flexible sheet attached at opposite ends to the ends of said coil sheet, and means for temporarily maintaining the coiled sheet of metal in an uncoiled position whereby the transparent heet is disposed above and spaced from the absorbent material, and means to close the sides so as to increase an air space within said structure.
  • the apparatus may be considered as a closed container formed of flexible sheet materials, the back wall of the container being formed of a sheet of metal which is adapted to coil upon itself.
  • Fig. 1 i a side elevation, perspective view, partly in section, of one embodiment of the distillation apparatus of the invention
  • Fig. 2 is a view of the apparatus of Fig. l in a coiled condition
  • Fig. 3 is a view of the apparatus of Fig. l in position for use.
  • the apparatus comprises a thin sheet IU of spring metal adapted normally to coil upon itself to form a compact roll as shown in Fig. 2, there being attached to the inner surface of the sheet In a layer l l of liquid absorbent material, the upper end l2 of such layer extending through and being secured in the longitudinal seam of a tubular member I3 which isattached to the upper end of the metal sheet as shown in Fig. 1. There is attached to this tube and communicating therewith a water tight reservoir l4 having an inlet l5 by which liquid may be supplied to the tube l3 and the absorbent layer 1 l. The liquid seeps from the tube [3 by capillary flow or wicking action so that the entire layer II is saturated with the liquid to be distilled.
  • the tube I3 is conveniently formed of a waterproof flexible sheet material
  • the lower end of the layer II extends into and is secured in the longitudinal seam I 6 of a tubular member I! which may be formed of the same waterproof material as the tube l3, one end of the tube [6 extending through the flexible side wall I 8 to form a spout Is by which excess liquid contained in the layer II is permitted to drain away.
  • the tube I 6 is spaced a short distance from the lower arcuate end 20 of the coiled sheet l so as to provide a lower liquid reservoir in the space 2
  • a sheet 24 of waterproof transparent flexible material is attached atits sides to the sidsheets I8 and l B and is attached at its upper and lower ends to the underside of the ends 25 and 26 of the metal sheet II).
  • temporary supporting means comprising the bars 21 which are pivoted by means of the pins 28 to one end, for example, the lower end 25, of the sheet Ill.
  • the upper ends of the bars 21 terminate in pins 21' which fit into slots in the upper edge 26 of the sheet l0.
  • the sheet I0 is uncoiled and maintained in the uncoiled position shown in Fig. 1 by means of the bars 21.
  • the liquid to be distilled is fed into the reservoir I4 through the inlet 15 from which it passes into the tube I3 and saturates the layer II.
  • the flow of liquid from the tube l3 down the layer ll may be regulated as desired.
  • the apparatus is then positioned so that the transparent window is normal to the m g. Fig. 3.
  • the me a1 back may be suppo ted upon the chest of a person or upon a sand dune whereby the metal back is heated.
  • the liquid in the layer I I may be vaporized and the vapor will condense on the inner surface of the transparent sheet 24 down which it will run and drain into the lower space 2
  • the rods 24 are folded against the base as shown by the broken arrows and the sheet material is allowed to coil upon itself as shown in Fig. 2.
  • the flexible containers l4 and 22 may then be collapsed against the end of the coiled device and protected from injury by means of the removable caps 3
  • These caps may be formed of any rigid material such as paper, pressed wood pulp, plastics, metal, stiffened fabric, and the like.
  • the apparatus comprises three main elements and several optional but desirable elements.
  • the essential elements are (1) the transparent window, (2) the absorbent material, and (3) the shaping means, i. e. the means by which the article is given form and rigidity and proper disposition of the absorbent layer'with respect to the window.
  • the shaping means i. e. the means by which the article is given form and rigidity and proper disposition of the absorbent layer'with respect to the window.
  • the sheet of transparent material shown in the apparatus of Fi 1 should be a flexible but form-retaining sheet of any suitable transparent material, such, for example, as a cellulose ester, a cellulose ether, or a synthetic resin.
  • a transparent plastic which is permeable to visible and infra-red radiation such, for example, as cellulose acetate and cellulose aceto-butyrate. It is obvious that evaporation can take place from both the front and rear surfaces of the absorbent layer H.
  • the transparent window divides the warm moist air of the interior from the cool dry air on the outside of the window, there will be normally a tendency of the window to become fogged by the condensation of droplets of water on the inner surface. Such droplets diffuse the light and decrease the radiation absorbed by the layer of absorbent material. Accordingly, it is desirable to retard or prevent fogging of the transparent window.
  • This may be accomplished by forming the window of a transparent material combined on one or both sides with a layer of water-absorbent, that is hydrophilic material, which absorbs the condensed water and prevents it from remaining as individual droplets, as described in my co-pending U. S. applications Serial Nos. 500,882 filed September 2, 1943 and 501,219 filed September 4, 1943.
  • the absorbent layer For the layer ll of absorbent material, there may be employed a layer of a viscose sponge, a pile fabric, a layer of inter-felted fibres; such, for example, as textile felt or a soft, porous paper which has been sized with a water-insoluble substance such, for example, as casein, a resin or a cellulose ester which does not disintegrate when wet. Since the layer should be capable of being washed and wrung out, it is preferably formed of a material having a sufiicient tensile strength for this purpose, that is, a textile fabric or felt, or sponge.
  • the absorbent layer is preferably colored black to render it more heat-absorbent and this may be done by dyeing or pigmenting the absorbent material with a suitable black dye or carbon black. To insure that the fresh water is free of harmful bacteria, the absorbent layer is advantageously rendered bacteriostatic or fungistatic and germicidal by combining it, e, g.
  • a suitable waterinsoluble germicide such as a phenyl mercury compound, finely divided ionized heavy metals, such as silver, copper or gold, or by means of an organic substantially water-insoluble germicide such, for example, as copper naphthenates, phenyl mercury chloride, phenyl mercury hydroxy quinoline, and dichlorodihydroxymethane.
  • the shaping means in the present apparatus comprises the coilable sheet l0 and the rods 21.
  • the sheet Ill may be made of any metal'or alloy showing resistance to distortion so that it will have a normal tendency to remain coiled.
  • the sheet In may be formed of an organic plastic material, in particular materials such as polystyrene, cellulose acetate butyrate and vinylidine chloride polymers which can be given sufiicient rigidity to form a coilable sheet.
  • All other sheet materials used in the apparatus may be formed of any flexible non-porous sheet material such, for example, as an organic plastic, textile fabrics, felt or paper. Such fibrous materials should be stifiened and rendered waterproof by impregnating or coatingthem with a hydrophobic cellulose ester, cellulose ether, synthetic resin, rubber, and the like. In general, all such sheet materials should be water-impermeable.
  • the sheet materials are preheated to shrink them, as described in my copending U. S. applications Serial Nos. 500,882 filed September 2, 1943, and 501,219 filed September 4, 1943.
  • a layer of absorbent material means for saturating the layer with the liquid to be distilled, a closed container formed of flexible material in which the absorbent layer is disposed, a transparent window in the container, the back of said container being formed of a thin sheet of spring metal having a normal tendency to coil upon itself, means to temporarily maintain said coiled back in an uncoiled condition whereby the window is rendered taut and spaced from said absorbent layer and a reservoir communicating with said container for receiving liquid distilled oif from said layer of absorbent material.
  • the transparent window is formed of a sheet of hydrophobic plastic material having a layer of hydrophilic material on the inner surface thereof.

Landscapes

  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Hydrology & Water Resources (AREA)
  • Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
  • Water Supply & Treatment (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Sustainable Development (AREA)
  • Sustainable Energy (AREA)
  • Vaporization, Distillation, Condensation, Sublimation, And Cold Traps (AREA)

Description

'April 9, 1946. w. R. P. DELANO COLLAPSIBLE DISTILLATION APPARATUS Filed Oct. 2, 1943 WILLIAM R. R DEL/1N0 mom Patented Apr. 9, 1946 COLLAPSIBLE DISTILLATION APPARATUS William R. P. Delano, Syosset, N. Y., assignor to GallowhurChemical Corporation, New York, N. Y., a corporation of Vermont Application October 2, 1943, Serial No. 504,682
.6 Claims.
This invention relates in general to distillation and in particular to an apparatus for distilling liquids, in particular sea water, and to correlated improvements designed to render such an apparatus collapsible and portable.
The need of a simple and convenient method of distilling impure water, such as sea water, for the production of fresh water for drinking and the like has long been recognized, but this need becomes increasingly important during times of war when the destruction of ships and airplanes at sea forces the crews to take to lifeboats, rafts and floats. Accordingly, any apparatus for distilling sea water to produce fresh water for drinking on lifesaving craft must meet, inter alia, the following stringent requirements:
1. The device must have a relatively low weight per unit of capacity.
2. The device must becompact and occupy a small space when not in use.
3. The device must be resistant to corrosion by sun, air, water and the action of the salts contained in sea water.
4. The device should be easy to erect and simple to operate.
5. The apparatus should be capable of being fabricated without the use of critical or scarce war material.
6. The device should operate upon a source of cheap, plentiful fuel without the use of an open flame which would create a fire hazard.
7. The fresh water produced should be free of salts, of harmful bacteria and should be substantially odorless and tasteless.
Accordingly, it is the general object of the pres-- ent invention to provide an apparatu for the distillation of liquids, in particular sea water, which will satisfy the objects above described and meetthe specifications recited.
It is a further object of the invention to provide a simple means for distilling sea Water which is adapted for use on small lifesaving craft.
It is a further object to provide an apparatus for distilling sea water which will be collapsible, compact and light in weight, so that it can be carried in airplanes and installed as regular equipment in small lifesaving craft.
Other objects of the invention will in part be obvious and will in part appear hereinafter.
According to the present invention, there is provided an apparatus for distilling liquids, especially for distilling sea water for the production of fresh water, comprising, the combination of, a sheet of spring metal adapted to coil about itself, a layer of absorbent material united to the inner surface of the metal sheet, means extending from the ends of the coiled sheet for saturating the .layer with the liquid to be distilled, a window comprising a transparent flexible sheet attached at opposite ends to the ends of said coil sheet, and means for temporarily maintaining the coiled sheet of metal in an uncoiled position whereby the transparent heet is disposed above and spaced from the absorbent material, and means to close the sides so as to increase an air space within said structure. In other words, the apparatus may be considered as a closed container formed of flexible sheet materials, the back wall of the container being formed of a sheet of metal which is adapted to coil upon itself.
For a more. complete understanding of the nature and the objects of the invention, reference should be had tb the accompanying drawing in i which: I
Fig. 1 i a side elevation, perspective view, partly in section, of one embodiment of the distillation apparatus of the invention;
Fig. 2 is a view of the apparatus of Fig. l in a coiled condition;
Fig. 3 is a view of the apparatus of Fig. l in position for use.
In that embodiment shown'in Figs. 1, 2 and 3, the apparatus comprises a thin sheet IU of spring metal adapted normally to coil upon itself to form a compact roll as shown in Fig. 2, there being attached to the inner surface of the sheet In a layer l l of liquid absorbent material, the upper end l2 of such layer extending through and being secured in the longitudinal seam of a tubular member I3 which isattached to the upper end of the metal sheet as shown in Fig. 1. There is attached to this tube and communicating therewith a water tight reservoir l4 having an inlet l5 by which liquid may be supplied to the tube l3 and the absorbent layer 1 l. The liquid seeps from the tube [3 by capillary flow or wicking action so that the entire layer II is saturated with the liquid to be distilled. The tube I3 is conveniently formed of a waterproof flexible sheet material,
such, for example, as a synthetic resin, rubber,
a cellulose derivative or a textile fabric impregnated or coated with one of these substances. The lower end of the layer II extends into and is secured in the longitudinal seam I 6 of a tubular member I! which may be formed of the same waterproof material as the tube l3, one end of the tube [6 extending through the flexible side wall I 8 to form a spout Is by which excess liquid contained in the layer II is permitted to drain away. The tube I 6 is spaced a short distance from the lower arcuate end 20 of the coiled sheet l so as to provide a lower liquid reservoir in the space 2|. At one side this reservoir communicates with a secondary liquid container 22 of waterproof material which is provided with an outlet 23. A sheet 24 of waterproof transparent flexible material is attached atits sides to the sidsheets I8 and l B and is attached at its upper and lower ends to the underside of the ends 25 and 26 of the metal sheet II). To maintain the metal sheet. in an uncoiled shape such as that shown in Fig. 1 whereby the transparent sheet is stretched taut and spaced from the absorbent layer ll, there is provided temporary supporting means comprising the bars 21 which are pivoted by means of the pins 28 to one end, for example, the lower end 25, of the sheet Ill. The upper ends of the bars 21 terminate in pins 21' which fit into slots in the upper edge 26 of the sheet l0.
To operate the apparatus shown in Fig. 1 for distilling liquid, the sheet I0 is uncoiled and maintained in the uncoiled position shown in Fig. 1 by means of the bars 21. The liquid to be distilled is fed into the reservoir I4 through the inlet 15 from which it passes into the tube I3 and saturates the layer II. By regulating the amount of air which seeps in through the inlet l by means of the screw cap 30, the flow of liquid from the tube l3 down the layer ll may be regulated as desired. The apparatus is then positioned so that the transparent window is normal to the m g. Fig. 3. Advantageously, the me a1 back may be suppo ted upon the chest of a person or upon a sand dune whereby the metal back is heated. The liquid in the layer I I may be vaporized and the vapor will condense on the inner surface of the transparent sheet 24 down which it will run and drain into the lower space 2|, from which the distilled liquid may be run into the container 22 and drawn therefrom through the outlet 23. Any excess liquid in the layer II will drain into the tube l1 and run out through the spout l9.
When it is desired to compact the apparatus, the rods 24 are folded against the base as shown by the broken arrows and the sheet material is allowed to coil upon itself as shown in Fig. 2. The flexible containers l4 and 22 may then be collapsed against the end of the coiled device and protected from injury by means of the removable caps 3| which are slipped over the ends of the coiled device as shown in Fig. 2. These caps may be formed of any rigid material such as paper, pressed wood pulp, plastics, metal, stiffened fabric, and the like.
It will be apparent from the above detailed description that the apparatus comprises three main elements and several optional but desirable elements. The essential elements are (1) the transparent window, (2) the absorbent material, and (3) the shaping means, i. e. the means by which the article is given form and rigidity and proper disposition of the absorbent layer'with respect to the window. Each of these elements will be described in detail hereinafter.
The transparent window The sheet of transparent material shown in the apparatus of Fi 1 should be a flexible but form-retaining sheet of any suitable transparent material, such, for example, as a cellulose ester, a cellulose ether, or a synthetic resin. Preferably, there is employed for this sheet material a transparent plastic which is permeable to visible and infra-red radiation such, for example, as cellulose acetate and cellulose aceto-butyrate. It is obvious that evaporation can take place from both the front and rear surfaces of the absorbent layer H.
Since the transparent window divides the warm moist air of the interior from the cool dry air on the outside of the window, there will be normally a tendency of the window to become fogged by the condensation of droplets of water on the inner surface. Such droplets diffuse the light and decrease the radiation absorbed by the layer of absorbent material. Accordingly, it is desirable to retard or prevent fogging of the transparent window. This may be accomplished by forming the window of a transparent material combined on one or both sides with a layer of water-absorbent, that is hydrophilic material, which absorbs the condensed water and prevents it from remaining as individual droplets, as described in my co-pending U. S. applications Serial Nos. 500,882 filed September 2, 1943 and 501,219 filed September 4, 1943.
The absorbent layer For the layer ll of absorbent material, there may be employed a layer of a viscose sponge, a pile fabric, a layer of inter-felted fibres; such, for example, as textile felt or a soft, porous paper which has been sized with a water-insoluble substance such, for example, as casein, a resin or a cellulose ester which does not disintegrate when wet. Since the layer should be capable of being washed and wrung out, it is preferably formed of a material having a sufiicient tensile strength for this purpose, that is, a textile fabric or felt, or sponge.
The absorbent layer is preferably colored black to render it more heat-absorbent and this may be done by dyeing or pigmenting the absorbent material with a suitable black dye or carbon black. To insure that the fresh water is free of harmful bacteria, the absorbent layer is advantageously rendered bacteriostatic or fungistatic and germicidal by combining it, e, g. by impregnation or coating, with a suitable waterinsoluble germicide such, for example, as a phenyl mercury compound, finely divided ionized heavy metals, such as silver, copper or gold, or by means of an organic substantially water-insoluble germicide such, for example, as copper naphthenates, phenyl mercury chloride, phenyl mercury hydroxy quinoline, and dichlorodihydroxymethane.
The shaping means in the present apparatus comprises the coilable sheet l0 and the rods 21. The sheet Ill may be made of any metal'or alloy showing resistance to distortion so that it will have a normal tendency to remain coiled. Instead of metal, the sheet In may be formed of an organic plastic material, in particular materials such as polystyrene, cellulose acetate butyrate and vinylidine chloride polymers which can be given sufiicient rigidity to form a coilable sheet.
All other sheet materials used in the apparatus may be formed of any flexible non-porous sheet material such, for example, as an organic plastic, textile fabrics, felt or paper. Such fibrous materials should be stifiened and rendered waterproof by impregnating or coatingthem with a hydrophobic cellulose ester, cellulose ether, synthetic resin, rubber, and the like. In general, all such sheet materials should be water-impermeable.
Since most organic plastic materials contain residual volatile solvents or volatile plasticizers, they tend to undergo changes in dimension when subjected to such temperatures as are generated by the suns rays. Therefore, in the now preferred embodiment, the sheet materials, before or after being incorporated in the device, are preheated to shrink them, as described in my copending U. S. applications Serial Nos. 500,882 filed September 2, 1943, and 501,219 filed September 4, 1943.
This application is a continuation-in-part of my co-pending application Serial No. 465,366 filed November 12, 1942.
Having described my invention, what I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent is:
1. In an apparatus for distilling liquids, the combination of, a layer of absorbent material, means for saturating the layer with the liquid to be distilled, a closed container formed of flexible material in which the absorbent layer is disposed, a transparent window in the container, the back of said container being formed of a thin sheet of spring metal having a normal tendency to coil upon itself, means to temporarily maintain said coiled back in an uncoiled condition whereby the window is rendered taut and spaced from said absorbent layer and a reservoir communicating with said container for receiving liquid distilled oif from said layer of absorbent material.
2. An apparatus according to claim 1 in which the lower end of the absorbent layer communicates with a Waterproof tube having one end extending through a wall of said container.
3. An apparatus according to claim 1 in which the upper end of said absorbent layer communicates with a waterproof tube, one end of which communicates with a liquid reservoir disposed outside of said container.
4. An apparatus according to claim 1 in which the base of the container is formed by the lower end of the metal sheet, said end forming a reservoir for the distilled liquid, one end of said reservoir communicating with a secondary reservoir located outside of said container.
5. An apparatus according to claim 1 in which the transparent window is formed of a sheet of hydrophobic plastic material having a layer of hydrophilic material on the inner surface thereof.
6. In an apparatus for distilling liquids the combination of a layer of absorbent material, means for supplying liquid to be distilled to said absorbent material, a closed container formed of flexible material in which said absorbent material is disposed, a transparent window in said container, a reservoir communicating with said conof being coiled upon itself into a form for storage
US504682A 1943-10-02 1943-10-02 Collapsible distillation apparatus Expired - Lifetime US2398291A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US504682A US2398291A (en) 1943-10-02 1943-10-02 Collapsible distillation apparatus

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US504682A US2398291A (en) 1943-10-02 1943-10-02 Collapsible distillation apparatus

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2398291A true US2398291A (en) 1946-04-09

Family

ID=24007294

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US504682A Expired - Lifetime US2398291A (en) 1943-10-02 1943-10-02 Collapsible distillation apparatus

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2398291A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2455834A (en) * 1945-08-27 1948-12-07 Stanley A Baron Inflatable solar still
US3351538A (en) * 1963-06-18 1967-11-07 Andrassy Stella Solar distillation equipment
US3436313A (en) * 1965-10-21 1969-04-01 Us Agriculture Survival still for obtaining potable water
US4267021A (en) * 1978-02-27 1981-05-12 Speros Dimitrios M Method and apparatus for solar distillation

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2455834A (en) * 1945-08-27 1948-12-07 Stanley A Baron Inflatable solar still
US3351538A (en) * 1963-06-18 1967-11-07 Andrassy Stella Solar distillation equipment
US3436313A (en) * 1965-10-21 1969-04-01 Us Agriculture Survival still for obtaining potable water
US4267021A (en) * 1978-02-27 1981-05-12 Speros Dimitrios M Method and apparatus for solar distillation

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2405877A (en) Apparatus for solar distillation
US2427262A (en) Inflatable solar still
US2412466A (en) Inflatable floating solar still with capillary feed
US2402737A (en) Process and apparatus for distilling liquids
US2413101A (en) Solar still with nonfogging window
NO156395C (en) EXPANDABLE BLOOD RESERVE.
KR970032902A (en) Absorbent composition and absorbent article including absorbent and absorbent
FI831696A0 (en) ANORDNING FOER BEHANDLING AV TYG I EN TORKTRUMLARE
US2398291A (en) Collapsible distillation apparatus
US3390056A (en) Portable water distillation apparatus
US2455834A (en) Inflatable solar still
ES333779A1 (en) Compact multiple effect still having stacked impervious and pervious membranes
US2398292A (en) Solar distilling apparatus
ES2054458T3 (en) CONDITIONING OF OBJECTS SUCH AS CELLULOSE GUATA ROLLS.
US4342203A (en) Cooling fabric
US2405118A (en) Solar distillation apparatus
SE8403561L (en) DEVICE FOR PREVENTING DRY INK IN PEN
US2572763A (en) Live fish bait container
GB936917A (en) Filter medium for separating water from hydrocarbon liquid
GB892984A (en) Improved dampening roll covers for planographic printing presses
GB432381A (en) Improvement to toilet roll holders
SE7601251L (en) LUGGAGE ROOM AND FLOOR CARPET FOR MOTOR VEHICLES AND OTHER TRANSPORT MATERIALS
CN112911860A (en) A waterproof ventilated membrane subassembly for electronic equipment
US1880275A (en) Humidor
SU859312A1 (en) Heliodistiller