Nanotech Coating Prevents Fogging
MilSF1 writes "MIT scientists have applied for a patent on a coating process that reduces or eliminates fogging on glass surfaces (car windshields, eyeglasses, etc). The new coating was described today at the 230th national meeting of the American Chemical Society."
"My crew chief applied a coating of Drene Shampoo to the windshield. For some unknown reason it worked as an effective antifrost device, and we continued using it even after the government purchased a special chemical that cost eighteen bucks a bottle."
Basically, they take a glass/plastic mix of microscopic particles, coat the glass and then subject it to high heat, making a glass sponge (Very simplified explination).
I always think of nanotech as something more novel. If this were thousands of billions of tiny squeegee bulldozers one micron across moving the water to the edge of the glass, then I'd consider it nanotech.
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An engineer named Richard Hartman developed antifog glasses for whitewater kayaking based on this concept several years ago. He developed a hydrophillic coating that was baked onto the lenses, and which prevented the formation of fog droplets. He even offered them for sale for a time--send him your prescription and he would send back a pair of glasses. I don't think he does that anymore.
Here is a recent post describing his work.
Here is a post from 2001 answering some questions about the glasses.
Here is a search on the Boatertalk forum for most posts about it.
Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
They make an anti-fog product sold under the Rain-X brand (in a black bottle, generally). It doesn't work very well on glass, and is just as safe on plastic as steel wool. :)
FWIW, my full-face helmet has a little vent on the front below the mask, and a shield over my nose that keeps me from breathing right on it. The combination seems to work fairly well as long as I'm moving. It's a Bell Sprint, and I'm fairly happy with it (in combination with a mirrored face shield, for occasionally riding off into the sunset). Their website sucks - as you can't link directly to a product, it uses Flash, and they don't even list that they have different face shields - but most any non-Harley "powersports" shop I've been in carries their stuff.