Guests quench their thirst for discovery at watery Imperial Fringe

by

Imperial Fringe: Water Water Everywhere

Water, water, was everywhere on Thursday when Imperial researchers showcased their latest rainy research.

Did you know that thirsty pavements are popping up around London to prevent flooding?

Or that pumping London’s water uses more energy than running the Tube?

Imperial’s Fringe event on Thursday was saturated with soggy scholarly pursuits. From parasite infested waters to oceans on other planets, 14 research teams from across the College showed off their projects.

See our guests dive into various pools of research below

Imperial’s Livingston Group taught guests to purify water with the power of pedal bikes

Bike

Bottled, tap or recycled: This blind, three-way test‎ with Nick Voulvoulis at Imperial's Centre for Environmental Policy certainly got our taste buds and brains working, but which water was which?

Taste

This award winning drone, developed by Talib Alhinai at Imperial’s Aerial Robotics Lab fixes cracks in hard-to-reach water pipes with expanding foam, so that humans don’t have to!

Drone

How many schistosomiasis-spreading snails did you find lurking in the water on Thursday? Guests explored with researchers from the Schistosomiasis Control Initiative

Snails

All this fun makes for thirsty work! Guests quenched their thirst with these portable, biodegradable, single-use water bottles, developed by Ooho Water at the Skipping Rocks Lab

Water bottle

…before treating themselves to a refreshing flavoured ice cone. 

cone

Water way to spend an evening!

See what visitors themselves made of the event below, with this round up of social media activity




Reporter

Caroline Brogan

Caroline Brogan
Communications Division

Click to expand or contract

Contact details

Tel: +44 (0)20 7594 3415
Email: caroline.brogan@imperial.ac.uk

Show all stories by this author

Tags:

Energy, Space, Strategy-multidisciplinary-research, Strategy-share-the-wonder, Public-engagement
See more tags

Comments

Comments are loading...

Leave a comment

Your comment may be published, displaying your name as you provide it, unless you request otherwise. Your contact details will never be published.