

The comparison I was trying to make is that we do have the power to capture 100% of a river. This isn’t good, for obvious reasons. Humidity capture is a much different process, since we can’t just capture 100% of the humidity from a panel either. You could have 80% humidity going in, but actually still 50% relative humidity going out. And that would be maximum absorbtion performance!

Actually, this isn’t quite as simple as a dew catcher. For MOFs specifically, there’s a fundamental physical chemistry principle going into it which is able to capture the water. At the molecular level, the MOF structures are super porous, which allows the water in the air to become trapped inside. The difference between that and dew catchers is dew catchers aren’t able to actually harvest gasseous H2O. They only harvest what is able to be deposited in liquid form. Water from air technology is a real thing, and there are at least decades of research on it.
You may have some experience with a slightly different form of vapor harvester, silica gel packets! Those use a chemical based methodology to bond with water molecules in the air instead. There are two major difference between those and MOFs is that MOFs are reusable, and silica gels are not quite reusable. The other difference is in the holding capacity of MOFs. They can hold significantly more water than silica based gels.
The economics of the emerging MOF field is definitely uncompetitive in it’s current form. The current price to performance ratio isn’t something that can currently compete with existing technologies, whether it is trucking water, or desalination. The industry knows this, and knows it must get the price down to competitive levels. However the reason why it is nobel prize winning this time is that now the performance is in a ballpark where it could be commercially viable. It would be more environmentally friendly to setup some solar water harvesters one time, rather than to be constantly trucking or piping in water from elsewhere. Extremely remote communities would be more self reliant if they don’t have to be paying exorbitant amounts of money each time for new water delivery.