Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin have developed a textile that can collect drinking water from the air, according to a study published in Scientific Advances. The fabric, tested in a jacket prototype, produced between 400 and 900 milliliters (about 14 to 30 ounces) of drinkable water per day depending on humidity levels.
How the Fabric Works
The special fabric is designed to collect moisture from ambient air and channel it into detachable harvesting units. Co-author Keith Johnston explained that "that transport design is what allows the material to work not just in a small lab test, but in a wearable system." The harvesters are then placed in a foldable collector piece and heated to produce drinkable water. Unlike existing water-collection methods that are large or cumbersome, this textile can be integrated directly into clothing.
Potential for Manufacturing
While the current form factor is a jacket, the research team—led by Guihua Yu—suggests the same textile could be used to manufacture other objects. "We wanted to rethink the form of the technology," Yu said. "If the fabric itself can collect water from air, it opens a new direction for personal and portable water access." Potential applications include manufacturing backpacks or tents with water-collecting capabilities.
Industrial and Commercial Applications
The technology could be particularly valuable for medical response teams or during emergencies in remote places. On the commercial side, the researchers noted it could be used for hiking and extreme sports gear. For manufacturers, the textile represents a new material platform that could be incorporated into existing product lines. The detachable harvesting unit design also suggests a modular manufacturing approach.
| Key Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Water output per day (prototype jacket) | 400–900 ml (14–30 oz) |
| Dependence | Humidity levels |
| Research institution | University of Texas at Austin |
| Publication | Scientific Advances |
| Lead researcher | Guihua Yu |
Production Timeline
The article does not specify a timeline for commercialization or mass production. The research is at an early stage, with the jacket serving as a proof-of-concept. Further development would be needed to scale the textile manufacturing process for commercial use.
For industrial procurement directors and OEM sourcing teams, this innovation may signal a future material category worth monitoring. While no current capacity figures or investment numbers are available, the technology’s ability to function in a wearable system—as opposed to bulky equipment—could eventually enable distributed water production in remote manufacturing sites or disaster relief operations.