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Algae control: first take one shark, basically OT
This is a fascinating article.
According to the Navy, algae and barnacles on hulls increase drag, slowing ships and reducing fuel efficiency. Of the $550 million to $600 million the Navy spends annually on powering its ships and submarines, at least $50 million stems directly from fouling-related increased drag.... Sharks have placoid scales, which consist of a rectangular base embedded in the skin with tiny spines or bristles that poke up from the surface - the reason a shark's skin feels rough to the touch. Brennan decided to try mimicking that surface with an artificial coating to see if it would also have antifouling properties. His first product: a combination plastic/rubber coating that a microscope reveals is made of billions of tiny raised diamond-shaped patterns. Each "sharklet" diamond measures 15 microns, or 15 thousandths of a millimeter, and contains seven raised ribs that at close examination resemble different lengths of raised horizontal bars. Laboratory tests show that the coating prevents a very common and detrimental type of algae, called Ulva, from becoming established because the algae's spores have great difficulty attaching to the diamond-shaped configuration. Entire article can be read he http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases...0310180225.htm |
On 15 Mar 2005 16:53:11 -0800, "kathy" wrote:
Entire article can be read he http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases...0310180225.htm Thanks, Hal |
kathy wrote:
This is a fascinating article. According to the Navy, algae and barnacles on hulls increase drag, slowing ships and reducing fuel efficiency. Of the $550 million to $600 million the Navy spends annually on powering its ships and submarines, at least $50 million stems directly from fouling-related increased drag.... It is fascinating. That figure only looks at the immediate cost of fuel. Then there's the cost of regular dry-docking for the addition of expensive anti-fouling paints & the completely hidden costs to the environment of the use of anti-fouling paints. Anybody involved with sea-going vessels has been searching for this sort of solution. -- derek |
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