Patent Document

1. CROSS REFERENCES 
     A.—This is the final application filing for the provisional application No. 60/058,062, dated Sep. 5, 1997; Foreign Filing License Feb. 11, 1998 
     B.—This is a Continuation-in-Part of: 
     a. Appl. Ser. No. 07/811,470—Dec. 18, 1991—U.S. Pat. No. 5,507,943; attention to Claim- 1 , Claim- 12 , Claim- 13 , Claim- 16 ; 
     b. Appl. No. 07/255,657—Oct. 13, 1988—U.S. Pat. No. 5,056,447; attention to Configuration #17 of summary; 
     c. Appl. No. 60/058,062—Sep. 5, 1997—Provisional Application; With Foreign Filing License Granted Feb. 11, 1998;—to establish Priority Date; and 
     d. Appl. Ser. No. 08/999,729—date filed Dec. 23, 1997—opposite turbine. 
    
    
     2. There is no government assistance on this invention, hence, the rights of the inventor on this idea is full. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     1. Technical Field 
     This new idea deals with heat exchange processes, cooling processes, and condensation processes, using water, in lieu of FREON, as the volatile evaporative matter for the production of cold air and distillates, and to avoid using FREON which is destructive upon the ozone layer. The newly invented devices herein are designed to use evaporation of water as a means to produce cold air, which is then supplied into the living places, work places, play areas, rest areas, and into green houses or plantations. The air is cold by evaporating fine water mist spray into the air which absorbs the water vapor. By means of an open air blower, the water-air mixture is then directed or blown into the place where the cold air is needed. In cases where the wind is naturally blowing into the place where the cold air is needed, without a blower, the water is sprayed into the wind so that the wind is cold before getting into the designated or anticipated place, such as, a house, a playground, recreation area, an orchard plantation, and a residential area. There are many concomitant new applications of the new devices concurrently invented in support to the processes involved, such as, distillation of water to produce drinking water, and production of humid air to be fed into gas turbine engines, to name a few applications of the new devices. It should be noted at this point that evaporation is a cooling process of the gas mixture into which the liquid mist is mixed with, while condensation is warming up of the matter with which the condensing vapor is in contact with, hence, evaporation must be supported to the maximum. One of such support is maximizing the water surface in contact with the other matter or medium of the evaporation, and another support is creation of vacuum environment surrounding the water particles, meaning—removing the other matter that oppresses or holds the water molecules close together, thereby making the water molecules free to fly off. 
     2. Description of the Prior Arts 
     Evaporative air coolers had been invented and existing since 1937 for various purposes in the efforts to produce a cool environment around an object to be cooled, by means of evaporating water thru the air which is then supplied to the environment. The existing water cooling system comprises of the following cases: 
     1. Water mist is sprayed into the open air by means of nozzles that are fixedly located around a patio in a series along a pipeline outside the house without the use of a blower; 
     2. Water mist is sprayed into the open air by fixedly located nozzles along the sidewalk outside shopping malls/stores and the mist is carried away by the wind regardless of where the wind is going; 
     3. Water is evaporated by means of wet cloth spacedly hanging, and by means of a blower, the air is forced to pass thru in between the wet cloths in order to produce cold air which is then directed into the place where the cool air is needed. 
     In the case No. 1: (a). the water is wasted without effectively cooling the air because, without moving the air, the tiny water particles that are sprayed into the air just drop down on the floor of the patio without being evaporated and the floor of the patio gets wet; (b). Without a blower, only 30% of the mist evaporates into the air, and if there is wind, the mist is just carried away by the wind away from the patio. In the case No. 2, the water is wasted because the mist is just carried away by the wind to places not intended to be served with cold air. In the case No. 3, there is no water-mist spray, hence, water evaporation is very slow because there is very little amount of water surface being exposed to the air, and it will be a very bulky construction to increase the wet cloth section of the cooling system. Additionally, the evaporation clothes become depository for dry salts, dust, and bacteria. 
     To further identify the distinctness of my present invention, the following cited references are hereby discussed, to wit: 
     1. U.S. Pat. No. 5,168,722 issued Dec. 8, 1992 discloses an air cooling system by water evaporation thru a water absorbent wick in the form of an air passageway. The wick is made of water absorbent materials, such as, a pad which takes up water from the water pan base of the cooling device. What is emphasized in this patent is a wet air passage called wick, that brings water around the moving air. The wick, serving as enhancement for evaporation of water, is a very limited and ineffective water evaporator, because the water surface on the pan is only multiplied Ten times by the wick, it being that it is only a cubicle, further, the wick becomes a depository of dried salt, dust, and bacteria from the water that is moving up thru the capillaries of the wick because evaporation is a drying process for the salts. Unfortunately, this patent does not emphasize multiplication or maximizing water surface in contact with the wind to speed up evaporation. Additionally, this patent has no intention to create vacuum environment surrounding the water particles as a means to speed up evaporation of water into the air. Hence, my present invention is different and distinct from this subject patent. 
     2. U.S. Pat. No. 5,497,633 issued Mar. 12, 1996 discloses a water cooling system by high pressure water spray outside the air duct by nozzles at the outlet of the air duct. The real emphasis of this patent is a new design for an inflatable, collapsible, flexible air duct and flexible pavilion for easy handling and portability, but does not emphasize and further has no intention to maximize water surface in contact with the air to speed up evaporation, hence, has no intention to spray the water in the form of water mist which would by atomizing the water, hence, as presented, has no intention to use venturi nozzle atomizer or to use a spiral nozzle. In fact, as described in details for FIG. 4, line 18, page 6 of the patent, it says—“in FIG. 4, nozzles 64 at the outlet have orifices sized for producing large jets of water”,—which means that the nozzles are not intentionally designed to produce atomized fine mist or not even fine sprinkles of water—that would be for the purpose of maximizing the water surface in contact with the air. Hence, this device fails to speed up evaporation. 
     Additionally, this patent discloses a wet porous membrane stretch across and substantially, not totally, blocking or restricting the air entrance towards the air fan and into the inflated air duct  56 , hoping to evaporate the water adhering to the porous membrane. But, unfortunately, the pin holes of the membrane, through which the air passes, are very limited in quantity which fails to allow sufficient air flow that would provide maximum water-air contact. 
     Additionally, the air mover is only an air fan and not a turbine that would create a vacuum high enough to suck enough sufficient air through the wet membrane  60 , hence, there is no intention to create a high vacuum in the chamber  56  between the wet membrane and the air fan, and hence, there is no intention to make the walls of the chamber into a highly resistant structure against implosion. It is very clear that this patent does not emphasize or has no intention to utilize vacuum as a means to enhance evaporation, because, in fact, it is emphasized that the air duct is pressurized as a means to make it stand up, which pressure reverses evaporation in the air duct. Hence, unfortunately, what has been evaporated from the wet membrane is condensed inside the pressurized air duct. It is therefore very clear that this U.S. Pat. No. 5,497,633 has no bearing to my new inventions. Hence, my new inventions are different and distinct from this patent. 
     3. U.S. Pat. No. 5,598,719 issued Feb. 4, 1997, has the same short comings and disadvantages as the aforementioned U.S. Pat. No. 5,497,633 because the emphasis is the new design of the structure for an outdoor rigid pavilion, hence, just the same as the preceding patent, the water is sprayed outside the air duct, except that the nozzles are now designed as atomizers but does not care to speed up evaporation in the air to the maximum as a means to efficiently cool the air, hence, the atomizer nozzles, as described, are just ordinary small diameter openings with nothing more added technology, and unfortunately, does not emphasize and has no intention to introduce high compressed air into the water nozzles or to discharge the water in the form of fine mist, that is why the clear intention of the patent is for outdoor applications only, and not for enclosures because the discharge place, or if the discharge place is an enclosure, the enclosure will get wet. 
     Additionally, this invention has no intention to evaporate water inside the air duct by means of vacuum environment. Further, this patent has no intention to spray water water mist directly into the open wind or to spray water directly in front of an air fan without the use of an air duct to make sure that the cold humid air is going into a definite place. Hence, my present invention is different and distinct from this patent. 
     4. U.S. Pat. No. 5,775,121 issued Jul. 7, 1998 discloses a refrigeration system that avoids the use of the ozone destructive FREON, and in lieu thereof, water mist is used as evaporative refrigerant. The emphasis of this patent is a new design for a heat exchanger that is why it does not care to speed up evaporation in the air, hence, it failed to emphasize and has not intention to incorporate a vacuum environment as a means to speed up evaporation of the water spray,—that is why, as shown and discussed in FIG.  12  and in the other drawings: 
     a. There is no sensible emphasized distance provided between the water sprayer  6  to the entrance of the heat exchanger  3 , within same distance, there should be time spent by the water particles to evaporate to capture the heat from the medium air, so that the cooling gas—water-air mixture, attains maximum coolness before entering the heat exchanger  3 ; 
     b. There is no emphasis or intention of the inventor to build the heat exchanger  3  and the air duct  8   e  to be structurally strong against implosion; 
     c. The air duct  8   e  has a very small diameter in which case, in effect, its wall catches the remaining un-evaporated water particles which then loss opportunity to evaporate further while traveling along the air duct  8   e ,—a process that would further cool the cooling gas Ab. The presence of the water pan D and Da is an admission that there is no further evaporation after the air-water mixture passes the heat exchanger  3 ; 
     d. There is no incorporation of a compressor to compress the air-water mixture as a means to condense the water vapor by force in the effort to di-humidify the cooling gas; 
     e. Further, the introduction of fresh air OA thru the entrance pipe K indicates that there is no vacuum in air duct  8   e;    
     f. Further, there is nothing in the whole discussion of the patent emphasizing that the air blower Fc is made strong enough to create a vacuum in air duct  8   e.    
     It is therefore clear, that this invention failed to efficiently evaporate the water spray, much less, to cool the cooling gas. Additionally, this patent has no mention of water distillation and/or desalination as a by product and/or concomitant creations and new applications in the so much efforts to evaporate water. Hence, my present invention is different and distinct from this patent. 
     5. U.S. Pat. No. 5,797,274 issued Aug. 25, 1998 discloses a water spray cooling system effected by a nozzle that atomizes the liquid coolant which get out through the exit of compressed air at the nozzle. The emphasis of this patent is the invention and new application of a temperature-sensitive non-electrical device that controls the emission of atomized coolant being sprayed onto the surface of a hot body  1  to prevent undue rise of excessive temperature of the body  1 , that is why it does not care or has no intention to describe why there is a need for atomization, and does not describe how atomization is done or attained by the coolant. Further, it does not care why there is a need to speed up evaporation in the air because it emphasizes that it is the hot body that evaporates the coolant. The thermocouple is already an old device, but using it to open a valve is a new application. What seems to be new is the thermal responsive chamber embedded in the hot surface and which is connected to the coolant valve by a capillary tube. The chamber and the capillary tube contains a fluid or a gas that expands with the increase in temperature. An increase in temperature of the fluid causes thermal expansion and increase in vapor pressure inside the capillary tube, and the vapor pressure opens the valve. What is emphasized by this patent is the new invention of a thermal-mechanical device that serves as an automatic activity controller. Hence, my invention is different and distinct from this patent. 
     In the Prior Arts 
     a. There is no concept or intention to use an open air blower to speed up the evaporation of the water mist spray; 
     b. There is no concept or intention to force by open air blower the water-mist-air mixture into a designated place; 
     c. There is no concept or intention to spray water-mist into the natural wind at a definite place so that the resulting cold wind anticipatedly blows into the designated place where the cold wind is needed, such anticipated or designated places are houses, residential areas, playgrounds, recreation areas, shopping centers, orchard plantations, work places, green houses, and sun decks; 
     d. There is no concept or intention to use compressed air-atomizer-nozzle to spray water-mist into the air for the purposes of evaporating water and cooling the air; 
     e. There is no concept or intention to confine the water mist into a vacuumed air duct/evaporation chamber wherein an air turbine at the exhaust end of the air duct effects vacuum suction in the duct to produce cold dry air; 
     f. There is no concept or intention to place an air tube radiator-type assembly into a vacuum water-mist evaporation chamber to effect heat exchange in order to produce a supply of dry cold air out from the radiator and into a house or co office. 
     g. There is no concept or intention to make an assembly of high/tall standing pipes wherein a plurality of water-mist nozzles are connected to and around and along the length of each tall stand pipe to maximize production of water mist into the air or wind; 
     h. There is no concept or intention to distill water thru mist-evaporation-compression-condensation process; 
     Hence, the prior arts do not present similar concepts as it is now being presented in this application for patent. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     This new invention is created for the following objectives and missions: 
     It is the 1 st  mission of this invention to enable the poor man to make his own cold air with out being a victim of high technology in which he spends ¼ of his life trying to pay for the high technology. The 2 nd  mission of this invention is to avoid the use of the ozone eliminator, FREON, and in lieu thereof, water is used a the volatile evaporation refrigerant as a means to produce humid cold air which is then supplied into the living places, work places, sports areas, into green houses, and into agri-plantations. Further, due to the increasing need for clean water for direct human consumption and for agriculture, and as a by-product of this evaporation activity, since water vapor is already cleaned out of salts and other minerals, it is therefore the 3 rd  mission of this invention to produce distilled water and other distillates to take advantage of the concomitant new applications of the new devices concurrently invented as a result in the efforts to meet the requirements by the laws of God in the physical properties of matter to make the processes function good enough. 
     It is further the objectives of this invention: 
     a. To provide relief to the problems obstructing the commercial use of the prior arts; 
     b. To introduce a new technology that speeds up the evaporation of water, by multiplying the water surface exposed to the air, thru introduction of water mist into a moving air/wind or into a vacuumed chamber, by means of a misting nozzle or by means of an atomizer,—a device wherein compressed air is allowed to come out thru a venturi nozzle where water is coming out at the same time; 
     c. To introduce a new technology that pushes/blows water-mist-air mixture into a designated place, wherein, a misting device is attached to the front frame of an air blower, or wherein, a plurality of misting devices are set up inside of an air duct where air is being forced thru or being vacuumed by an air pump/turbine that blows the air out of the air duct and into a designated place, or wherein, a plurality of water misting devices are set to introduce mist into the natural wind—said misting devices are disposed in a place where the wind is anticipatedly blowing into a designated place. 
     d. To introduce a new technology for desalination of sea water by way of water mist spray and then the saturated humid air is compressed into a radiator system that is exposed to cold air or that is submerged into cold waters or that is refrigerated or frosted, or wherein, the humid compressed air is released underwater in the form of fine/tiny bubbles into a body of cold water, in order to produce distilled or drinking water; 
     e. To introduce a new technology for the production of dry cold air out of water mist evaporation, by way of passing the supply air thru a radiator pipe system that is inside a vacuum evaporation cold chamber; 
     f. To introduce a new technology for the rapid production of large quantities of cold air that is supplied to a large residential area, a large playground, a large orchard plantation, or a large green house, by way of a plurality of misting devices set in the open field to introduce water mist into the wind; 
     g. To introduce a new technology for force condensation of the clouds which is by way of vacuum pump sucking the clouds into an air duct and compressing it thru a cold radiator pipe system that is submerged into cold environment and releasing the compressed cloud in the form of tiny bubbles thru deep cold water; 
     h. To introduce a new process for distilling a liquid at low temperature, wherein, the liquid is mist sprayed inside a vacuum chamber to make it evaporate a low temperature, and then the resulting vapor is sucked by a force pump and then same vapor is compressed into a heat exchange high pressure radiator pipe assembly that is cooled or refrigerated in order to condense or liquefy the vapor by force inside the pipes; 
     i. To introduce a new process by which to supply cold high humidity salt free air into a gas turbine engine in order to increase the power out put of said engine in the same rate of fuel consumption, by way of cold water mist evaporation system; 
     j. To introduce various technologies by which to clean the cold moist air and to remove excess water mist particles from the cold air thru centrifugal devices having peripheral stilling chambers, windows, and moisture traps; 
     k. To introduce a new Technology by which to minimized usage of materials resistant to corrosive sea water in the construction of the vacuum evaporation chamber, wherein, low cost strong materials, such as concrete, is coated by anti-corrosion materials or protected by a high grade stainless steel or ceramics, or glass to name a few; 
     1. To create and introduce new designs of new devices, new machinery, new kinds of structural parts and mechanical parts made of new kinds of materials, such as glass, stainless steel, concrete, etc. protected from the action of salts, in support to the above new processes and new technologies. 
     The following are the basic un-amendable laws of God governing the physical properties of matter, such as water and air, among others, which support the processes and which lead to the creation of the new devices necessary to meet the requirements of the laws in order to obtain the desired maximum rewards, such as cold air, distilled water, and enjoyable life, new machinery, new devices to serve man, among other end results, to wit: 
     1. A vacuum environment surrounding a liquid is one major factor to speed up evaporation because the liquid molecules are not oppressed and are not held back close together, hence, the molecules are free to fly out after overcoming the surface tension between molecules; 
     2. To speed up evaporation, as much as possible, every molecule of the liquid must be place up front in contact with the surrounding medium or environment, such as air or a vacuum. This means that there should be no molecule behind another molecule of the liquid facing the medium of evaporation. Every molecule must be at the front line ready to fly free. Therefore, the atomizer must spray the water mist as fine as possible to the extent imaginable that only three molecules are grouped in one mist particle. This is maximizing the water surface in contact with the space upon which the liquid molecules migrate into; 
     3. Further, the mist must not be too crowded to prevent re-grouping or fusing together among the already misted particles as they will bump each other, and the fused mist particles become larger particles. Hence, the mist must be kept moving away from the atomizer; 
     4. The air into which the water mist is sprayed must be a moving wind to speed up evaporation. Otherwise, the air gets saturated immediately in humidity and the evaporation process stops, hence, the cooling process stops. By releasing the water mist into the wind, the water molecules are provided with successive free rooms in between the air molecules, into which rooms the water vaporizes; 
     5. As much as possible, in order to speed up evaporation, the air, serving as medium, must be dry, dehumidified, and humidity hungry air, in order to have plenty of rooms to accommodate vapor. 
     The air is made moisture hungry: 
     a. by making the air partially vacuumed; 
     b. by warming up or heating up the air; 
     c. by dehumidifying the air, which is done: 
     *** by compressing the humid air in a cold environment to forcibly condense its water content inside a heat exchange radiator tube assembly; 
     *** by compressing the humid air and releasing the compressed humid air in a deep cold water—where the compressed humid air becomes over saturated in humidity because the spaces between the air molecules are eliminated. The air then becomes cold and less hungry, and the compressed vapor is caught or adheres to the high pressure cold water,—meaning, the high pressure water serves as condenser, vapor catcher or vapor trap and it is growing in quantity as a distilled water during the condensation process. This means that the vapor-air mixture must be compressed high enough in order to overcome the static pressure of the deep water before the air comes out thru tiny nozzles into the water in the form of tiny bubbles. The air bubbles come out of the water surface as a dehumidified cold air. The hungry cold air is then fed back and re-cycled into the vacuum evaporation chamber to pick up another new water vapor from the mist spray and get saturated, this same newly saturated air is again compressed and released as tiny bubbles in deep cold water for dehumidification. This complete cycle is a new process of distillation. 
     6. Additionally, under the same law as above, time is require by the water particles/mist to be able to evaporate and be dissolved as vapor into the air. To meet this requirement, the vacuum evaporation air duct is elongated or made longer to provide time for evaporation before reaching the vacuum turbine. The length of the vacuum air duct depends upon the speed or time spent of the air-water mixture in traveling from the point of the misting nozzles to the vacuum turbine. Additionally, the time for complete evaporation is directly proportional to:—a. the mist-air mixture ratio; and—b. how high is the vacuum. 
     To attain the foregoing objectives, the aforementioned laws must be satisfied, and as concomitant rewards, various new inventions, new designs of materials and parts, new configurations, and new processes have been created, which serve as highlights of this invention and which make this inventions different and distinct from the prior arts, and hereby applied for Proprietary Rights Protection, such as the following: 
     1. A new concept of blowing air thru a water mist spray towards a desired place to make the air cooler and to prevent incomplete evaporation of the mist; 
     2. A new concept of attaching a water hose/tube-mist-sprayer to the frames of an open air oscillating blower so that the mist sprayer goes with the left and right swinging of the air blower; 
     3. A new concept of constructing a self standing water pipe misting device that is provided with a plurality of misting nozzles connected around the pipe and along the length of the pipe to maximize production of water mist, and an air blower is set to blow air thru said misting device; 
     4. A new concept of erecting a plurality of standing misting water pipes in an array formation to maximize production of water mist into the wind that blows into a large residential community, recreation area, play ground, orchard plantation and greenhouses and work places; 
     5. A new concept of spraying water mist inside a vacuumed air duct, wherein the air blower is inside the exhaust end of the air duct so that there is more air going out of the duct than air going into the duct, the difference is supplied by the evaporated water mist, in order to convert the air into cold air inside the duct, it being that there is throttle valve at the inlet of the air duct to limit the air getting in; 
     6. A new concept of making dry cold air thru the use of water mist spray, wherein, a plurality of small air tubes are arranged and assembled into a radiator-type formation inside and along the length of the vacuumed evaporator air duct, and air is forced to pass thru the radiator air tubes by means of a main supply air pipe that is connected to all/each of the inlet of the radiator air tubes and a main output air pipe that is connected to all or each of the outlet ends of the radiator air tubes, said main output air pipe is extended to deliver dry cold air into a house or into an office; 
     7. A new concept of injecting water mist spray into an air duct by means of an atomizer, which is an assembly of a compressed air pipe, and a water pipe, that are joint together in a venturi tube/nozzle; 
     8. A new concept of releasing compressed air into the water-mist air duct to push the mist thru the duct, wherein, the compressed air is being pre-cold thru another cooling device before it is released into the air duct where the released compressed air is further cold by the water mist; 
     9. A new concept of using a plurality of atomizers to speed up production of water mist thru the open wind to supply cold wind to a large area, and to accumulate/collect salt left by the evaporated sea water on the misting open field; 
     10. A new concept of condensing the water out of the humid air thru compression of the humid air and subject the compression container into a cold environment; 
     11. A new concept of passing the humid air thru a cyclone centrifugal device in order to separate the dust particles of salt left out by the evaporated water and also to separate the excess water mist from the air wherein the air is already saturated with moisture; 
     12. A new concept of feeding the resulting clean humid air out of the cyclone centrifugal separator into a gas turbine engine in order to increase the power output of the engine due to increase intake of more matter that expands in the combustion chamber; 
     13. A new concept or new design for a hybrid Centrifugal Cyclone Separator wherein, a stilling chamber is created around the peripheral walls by installing a perforated inner wall a few inches inner from the main drum wall, so that the dust particles will get thru the perforations and get stilled and forced to settle down to the bottom of the stilling chamber; 
     14. A new process of producing drinking water, wherein, to take advantage being already a clean vapor, the cloud is sucked and compressed into and forced to condense in a high pressure radiator pipe condensation assembly that is submerged in ice cold water, or release as tiny bubbles in cold water; 
     15. A new structural design for a vacuum evaporation air duct, wherein, the main structure is a large concrete tunnel which accommodates a truck or a rail cart that passes thru it for maintenance purposes, said concrete is protected from the action of salt by a curtain of stainless steel sheets or plastic sheets along the inside walls of the said tunnel, said curtain having a neutral weep hole so that the space between the curtain and the tunnel is also a vacuum during the vacuuming processes,—meaning the air pressure on both sides of the curtain are equal, and wherein, a railway track and walk way is provided/constructed on floor of the curtain/tunnel; 
     16. A new structural design for the construction of a tall tower suction stand pipe/device to reach up to the clouds for the purpose of force liquefaction of the clouds by compression as shown by FIG. 14, said suction stand pipe being alternatively in the form of a high pressure inflated large diameter cylindrical post erected tall to reach the clouds as shown by FIG. 14A, which post carry plurality of light weight suction hoses attached hanging around said post, or said tall tower suction device is in the form of a plurality of high pressure cylindrical inflated posts fastened together around an inflated ring strut structure to form a rigid standing inflated tower, then said bundle of inflated posts is wrapped around by a light weight sheet to form a self standing suction hose, it being that there are large spaces in-between the inflated posts; 
     17. A new concept and design for a multistage centrifugal pump that functions as vacuum pump and compressor at the same time, wherein, the pump is a series of co-axial turbine pumps in a common drive shaft, each turbine blade attached to a spinning plate that separates each pump, and wherein, a plurality of air stilling fins/plates are axially attached to the inside walls of the air duct between turbines, and wherein, a drainage valve is provided to remove excess water at the bottom of each turbine, and which serves as the prime mover in the vacuum evaporation air duct for evaporation and compression vapor in a distillation process, per FIG. 12, part  2 ; 
     18. A new concept and design for excess water removal air duct, wherein, a spiral fin is attached spirally to the inside walls of the humid cold air delivery air duct, and wherein, a drainage valve is provided at the bottom of the air duct to drain the excess water. 
     There are many variations in water-mist-moving-air relationship including structures on land and structures floating/submerged in the ocean, of which the herein inventor hereby reserves all the proprietary rights and privileges for himself. 
     BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION 
     Accordingly and pursuant to the objectives this invention, and as enumerated in the summary, various ideas has been created and many configurations of apparatus had been designed to implement these new ideas. This invention advocates to free the ordinary man from being a victim of complicated technology and to gave the poor man the chance to enjoy a better life without being milked too much by the technology people. To achieve this goal, the herein inventor must bring down cost and make it easy for the ordinary man to effect cooling system by avoiding high technology and by avoiding the use of scarce refrigerants, such as, FREON, etc., which are environmental enemies. In this invention, the new low cost method is by evaporating the abundantly available water thru fine mist spray into the natural wind, or into the artificial wind, or into a wind tunnel or wind pipe or air duct. Since the evaporation of water is a cooling process, and since water is abundant, it is but logical to evaporate as much water as possible at a high speed at low temperature without the used of heat, but instead, a vacuum chamber evaporator is used, into which, the water is sprayed in the form of a fine mist in order to create a large quantity of water surface that is exposed to the air to enhance evaporation, and an additional evaporation enhancement is introduced by vacuuming the evaporation chamber thru the use of high speed turbine that rapidly sucks the air from the chamber and blow the cold air out/into the place where the cold air is needed. It should be noted at this point that by vacuuming the evaporation chamber,—means removing the atmospheric pressure that holds back the water molecules from flying off or from evaporating. In order to give more time for the water mist to evaporate, the air duct/vacuum evaporation chamber is further elongated, so that the water mist travels a long distance to stay longer time in a vacuum atmosphere, so that the water mist is dissolved in the air before the cold air is expelled out of the air duct. 
     Additionally, as there will be dusts of mineral salts left out by the evaporated water mist, and as the air becomes over humidified wherein some of the water mist is not evaporated totally, then the mist-air mixture is passed thru a cyclone centrifugal separator in order to clean the air before it is feed to any place, such as a gas turbine engine. There are wide varieties of applications of this Water Misting in combination with Air Blowing Cooling System, including making cold air, making the wind cooler, extracting salt out of sea water, distillation of liquids, or making drinking water out of sea water by water mist evaporation and compressed condensation; blowing cold humid wind to stadiums, to playgrounds, to residential areas, to recreation areas, to greenhouses, to orchard plantations, to sun decks, compressing the clouds into a drinking water, etc., to name a few. In the efforts to maximize utilization and commercialization of the vacuum evaporation chamber, since it is by itself a new invention, there are available wide varieties of new apparatus and new devices concomitantly invented in support of the vaporization and condensation process, such new devices including: machinery/mechanical parts made/formed out of glass, a large/long chamber made transparent, a high/tall inflated vertical tower serving as vacuum air duct to suck the clouds, a platform made of assembled transparent glass vacuum chambers submerged/floating on the ocean serving for desalination, housing, and floating sea wall, a vacuum chamber having sub-chambers by subdivision cross walls for various applications such as a house, fishing boat/submarine and water/land transportation decorated and formed into the likeness of a large fish, and floating fence out of vertical chambers serving as sea wall, to name a few applications,—of which new ideas the user of this invention should maximize benefits from, and of which new ideas the herein inventor hereby reserves all proprietary rights and hereby applies for patent protection. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG.  1 —illustrates a new idea for an oscillating blower being provided with a water misting device in order to blow cold wind. 
     FIG.  2 —illustrates a new idea for as self standing water misting pipe. 
     FIG.  1  and FIG.  2 —together, further illustrates a new idea for a cooling system wherein wind is blown thru the water mist to make cold wind. 
     FIG.  3 —illustrates a new design for a water-mist-blower cooling system thru an air duct vacuum evaporation chamber, and distillation device. 
     FIG.  4 —illustrates a new design for plurality of standing water misting pipes and a plurality of atomizers disposed in the open wind field. 
     FIG.  5 —illustrates a new design for a cyclone centrifugal air cleaner having stilling trap chambers to remove the unevaporated water mists. 
     FIG.  6 —illustrates a new design for a multi-branch water misting tube being placed to the front of a wind blower. 
     FIG.  7 —illustrates a new design for a multi-nozzle flexible water hose and being placed to the front of a wind blower to cool the wind. 
     FIG.  8 —illustrates a new idea of pressurized water supply, wherein any kind of water containers is injected with compressed air. 
     FIG.  9 —illustrates a new design for supplying salt free humid air into a gas turbine engine to increase its power output. 
     FIG.  9 —further illustrates a new design for forced vapor condensation where the condensation radiator is placed inside an evaporation chamber. 
     FIG.  10 —illustrates a new design for a centrifugal pump which functions as a cyclone centrifugal particle separator at the same time. 
     FIG.  11 —illustrates a new design to make cold dry air by way of a moisture collecting centrifugal pump and a centrifugal air duct. 
     FIG.  12 —illustrates a new design for a high vacuum evaporation chamber by way of multistage moisture clean centrifugal pump and air duct. 
     FIG.  13 —illustrates a new design for a liquid distillation system that produce high pressure vapor which is supplied to a cool condenser. 
     FIG.  13 —further illustrates a new design for a desalination system by way of a water mist distillation process. 
     FIG.  14 —illustrates a new design for collecting, compressing and condensing the clouds into a drinking water by multistage vac/compressor. 
     FIG.  14 A—illustrates one of the variable details of Section  14 A of FIG. 14 which is a new design for an inflatable cloud collecting tall tower. 
     FIG.  15 —illustrates a new design for a misting distillation system wherein the vac.-chamber and the air/liquid supply is heated up by trash burner. 
     FIG.  16 —illustrates a new design for a distillation system wherein a solar heater and a piston-type multistage vac/compressor is used in FIG.  15 . 
     FIG.  17 —illustrates a new design for a large vacuum chamber misting evaporator made up of low cost arc structure but protected by a curtain. 
     FIG.  18 —illustrates a detail of the Section- 18  in FIG. 17 showing a new low cost structural design for the vacuum chamber evaporator. 
     FIG.  19 —illustrates a new design for a potable size misting vac-chamber distillation system having an inner liner acid resistant curtain. 
     FIG.  20 —illustrates an implosion resistant top cover for the drum in FIG.  19 . 
     FIG.  21 —illustrates an implosion resistant bottom cover for the drum in A; FIG. 19 show the detail of the support foot. 
     FIG.  22 —illustrates a new design for a drum that is strong against implosion but uses least cost of materials. 
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     In support to the advocacy of this invention, the following configurations, embodiments, and structural/mechanical designs are created to provide the most appropriate technology, which can be more understood by further reading the following descriptions of the figures, to wit: 
     FIG.  1 —illustrates a new embodiment of a plurality of water-mist spray nozzles part  2  that spray the water mist  21  infront of an air blower  1  that has a blower blade  9  in order to evaporate the mist  21  and drive the cold air/wind  26  into a designated place. The plurality of misting nozzles  2  are spacedly connected to the water tube  4  which is continued and appropriately bent to create an inverted “U” water tube section  6  over the safety frame  8  of the blower blade  9 , and the water tube is again continued and further bent to create a ¼ circle curved section  10  that fits with the curvature of the outer shell of the blower&#39;s motor  12 . From the section  10 , the water tube is extended straight to some inches down and a screw coupling connector  18  is attached to the lower end of the water tube  10 . A circumferential flexible strap clamp  16  is also created to fit around the outer shell  12  and said clamp  16  is tightly fitted upon the shell  12  by a closing bolt at the bottom of the strap clamp  16 . The curved section  10  of the water tube is then attached to the outside face of the strap clamp  16  at the 12 o&#39;clock to 3 o&#39;clock section of the clamp thru the strap-type fasteners  26 . To supply water to the nozzles  2 , a flexible high pressure water hose  20  is connected to the water tube  4 ,  6 , and  10  thru the screw coupling connector  18 . The water hose being flexible, allows the blower assembly  8 ,  9 ,  12  to oscillate left and right without resistance. It should be noted at this point that the misting device-blower assembly, may vary in sizes, such that the part  22  which is the support post/stand can vary in height and in quantity, from one foot high to 20 feet high depending upon the style and size of the blower  1  which can also vary in diameter from 8 inches to 20 feet diameter and the blower  1  can also be a fixed one or an oscillating blower. In cases where the blower  1  becomes a large diameter, then there is more need for a bigger quantity of the misting nozzles  2  in which case, the misting water tube  4  is in the form of a plurality of concentric circles or in the form of a plurality of radially assembled tube bars in order to accommodate a large number of the misting nozzles  2 . Where there is a large number of misting nozzles  2 , then the size of the water supply tube  6 ,  10  and the water hose  20  must also be increased. The support pad  24  can also vary in size, in style and in quantity to match the style and the size of the blower  1 . 
     FIG.  2 —illustrates a new embodiment of a water-mist-blower assembly, wherein, a misting device, in the form of a plurality of misting nozzles  2  that are spacedly connected around and along the length of a self standing water tube/pipe bar  4 , is placed to stand infront of a fixed blower  1 . The standing water tube/pipe bar  4  is supported by its lower base section in the form of a circularly bent/curved water tube  14  which is extended to a straight horizontal bar which ends with a screw coupling connector  18  thru which the water supply hose  20  is connected in order to supply water to the misting nozzles  2 . Where the blower  1  is not oscillating to the left and to the right, there is no need to attached a misting device, parts  2  and  4 , to the frames of the blower  1 , but instead, if the blower  1  is fixed, then it is just the self standing misting device of FIG. 2 that is placed/erected to spray water mist  21  into the blowing wind  26  to make the construction job simple and low cost. Where the blower  1  is large, then it will be a plurality of the self standing misting device of FIG. 2 that is placed infront of the large blower  1 . The quantity, height, and style of the self standing misting device, as shown in FIG. 4, that are place infront of the blowers  1 , depends upon the size and quantity of the air blower  1 , which can be an array of several air blower  1 , in order to blow cold air  26  to abode areas, livestock areas, green areas, and places that need cold and humid air. 
     FIG.  3 —illustrates a new embodiment of a water-mist-blower assembly, which is also used for sea water desalination to produce drinking water, wherein the water mist  21 , being introduced by the misting device nozzle  2 , and water tube  4 , is confined in an air duct  7  into which compressed air  23  is forced in, in order to blow out the water mist  21  thru the outlet end of the air duct  7 . Part  6  is the main water pipe that supplies the nozzle  2  thru tube  4 . Alternatively, for purposes of more effective cooling process, the water mist  21  is rapidly evaporated by vacuuming the air duct  7  so the molecules of the water mist can fly off easily. The vacuum is effected by limiting the quantity of air that gets into the air duct  7  and the water-mist-air mixture is rapidly expelled by the blower  9  out of the air duct  7 . If there is more air going out than the air getting into the air duct  7 , then for sure, the difference is filled up by the evaporated water which effects the cooling process. The rapid expulsion of air from the air duct  7  is effected by making the motor  12  into a higher horsepower, and additionally, a plurality of turbine vane  17  are radially attached around the inside peripheral walls of the air duct  7  in order to reverse the rotation of the air as it approaches the blades of the blower  9  which are in opposite rotation against the inclination of the vanes  17 . This is to increase the speed of the blower blade  9  in relation with the movement of the air being deflected by the blower blades  9 . For more effective vacuuming which is by way of more rapid expulsion of the air out of the air duct  7 , a second clockwise blower machine  9  is installed at least one-fourth (¼) inch in front of the counter-clockwise first blower, in which case, the resulting blower machine  9  becomes a 3-stage blower, in which case, for purposes of sea water desalination, the blower machine  9  becomes a multistage gas turbine vacuum-compressor machine. Further, for more rapid introduction of water mist  21  into the vacuumed air duct  7 , a plurality of atomizers  13  are co installed inside the air duct, such atomizer being an assembly of a compressed air pipe  3  that is connected to an air outlet venturi tube  13  and a water supply tube  4  that is also connected to the venturi tube outlet  13  at a point after the neck of the venturi tube  13 . Again for a better result in the cooling process, the compressed air  3  and the water supply  4  are pre-cold, from a separate water misting cooler, before they get into the atomizer  13 , in which case, a heat insulator  15  is wrapped around the compressed air tube  3 , around the water supply  4 , and around the water supply  6  to prevent warming up of the air and water supply. In the same purpose, a heat insulator  15  is also wrapped around the vacuumed evaporation air duct  7  to prevent heat transfer from the outside warm air. In order to obtain cold dry air from the evaporation air duct  7 , a radiator-type heat exchanger  27  is placed inside the evaporation air duct, said radiator is made of a plurality of air tubes with their inlets connected to a large supply header air duct  28  that pierced thru and into the air duct  7  at the first ¼ section of the evaporator air duct  7 , and the outlets of the radiator tubes  27  are communicated with a another large outlet header air duct  29  that pierce thru and into the evaporator air duct  7  at the last ¼ section of the air duct  7 , in which case, for a better heat exchange effectiveness, the evaporator air duct  7  is further elongated so that the radiator tubes  27  may be further elongated also and that more radiator tubes  27  are added into the radiator system. The large cold air outlet  29  is then communicated with a house or with an office to supply the dry cold air into an office or a house. A strap fastener holds the water supply tube  4  to the ceiling of the air duct  7 . Part  11  is a flat bar that is fastened to the walls of the air duct  7  to hold the motor  12  to the center of the air duct  7 . The cold air coming out of the air duct  7  is then blown out to a patio, or into a house in which case the windows of the house must be open to exhaust the humid air. Another important application of this humid air supplier is to feed the humid air into a gas turbine engine in order to have more matter that expands in the combustion chamber, in which case, the blower  9  is already the turbine compressor of the gas turbine engine. Another application of the radiator  27  inside the cooling evaporator chamber is to be used as condensation radiator tubes for distillates such as the unburned fumes from a trash incinerator to collect sulfur, gums, and tars, and also for condensation of water vapor coming out from the vacuumed air duct  7  in order to produce drinking water out of the sea water,—which is actually a desalination process, to name a few. In a case where this machine is used for desalination, the large compressed air inlet  23  is removed and the front end of chamber  7  is totally closed, while the rear end of the air duct/chamber  7  is totally connected/communicated to the air duct  28  in order to compressed and condense all the water vapor being pushed out by the turbine machine  9 . Further, in order to condense all the water vapors, the outlet air duct  29  is connected/communicated to a fine air bubble outlet system that is submerged under ice cold distilled water in order to release the water vapor in the form of fine air bubbles so that the ice cold distilled water will catch the water vapor. Then, what ever left uncondensed, is clean compressed air which is then separated from the water by a float valve and then directed and recycled to exit at the atomizer nozzle  13 . Further, the compressed air being supplied to the atomizer nozzle  13  thru the tube  3  comes from the multistage gas turbine compressor  9 , in order to keep recycling the air being used to blow at the atomizer nozzle  13  to avoid introducing new dirty air from outside the chamber  7 . There are various new applications for this vacuum chamber evaporator cooling system, including ocean structures wherein the compressor  9  and chamber  7  are made of glass serving as floating sea wall, of which new ideas, the herein inventor hereby reserves all the rights. 
     FIG.  4 —illustrates a new embodiment of a plurality of standing high pressure water pipes  4  in an array formation, having a plurality of misting nozzles  2  at the top, around and along the length of each standing pipe  4  in order to introduce water mist  21  rapidly into the wind  26  for purposes of making the wind into a cold wind. The base of each standing pipe  4 , serving as water inlet, are spacedly communicated to a main water supply pipe  20  that is laid on the ground transverse to the wind. A guy wire/rope  19  is attached each side of each of the standing misting pipe  4  and anchored to the ground  25  in order to hold the pipe  4  upright. Additionally, where the water pressure is low, an array of a plurality of atomizers  13  are assembled on the ground to rapidly introduce water mist into the wind  26 , comprising: a plurality of venturi nozzles  13  spacedly connected/communicated with and along the length of a plurality of compressed air pipes  3 , a water supply tube  5  being communicated to the venturi nozzle  13 , and a main water supply pipe  20  to which the other end of the water tube  5  is communicated, said main water pipe  20  being laid on the ground parallel to and alongside with the compressed air pipe  3 . Several of the standing pipe  4  water misting assembly and several of the atomizer water misting assembly may be installed in an open field to spray water mist into the wind  26  in such locations that the wind will anticipatedly blow towards a playground, a recreation area, a stadium, a residential area, an orchard plantation area, a greenhouse area, a job site area, into a work place/building and into livestock areas. There are many alternative applications for this multiple misting assembly in the open wind, including salt making out of sea water by spraying salt water on the beach on top of a wide plastic sheet laid on the beach, by using the water-wave energy under U.S. Pat. No. 5,507,943 to pressurize water/air into the misting pipe  4 , which new ideas, proprietary rights are hereby reserved/applied for by the herein inventor. 
     FIG.  5 —illustrates a new embodiment for an air cleaner device in the form of a Centrifugal Cyclone separator  34 , which is an integral part of FIG. 3 as viewed thru Section 5—5 of FIG. 3, and thin which, the water-mist-air mixture from the air duct  7  is passed thru for purposes of cleaning the air of its salt dust and excess water mist flowing out with the air. The Cyclone  34  is intercommunicated and connected to the air duct  7  thru the coupling pipe-lip flange  32  of the inlet pipe  30 . Again for sure, the heat insulator  15  is also wrapped around the cyclone  34  to prevent the cold air from warming up from the outside warm air. As evaporation of the water takes place, there will be minerals and impurities being separated from the water mists in the form of fine dust particles of salts, calcium, etc., that do not dissolve into the air, but this salt particles, being very minute particles, including the surplus water mist, will be floating and flowing with the air/wind to where ever the wind goes, hence, there is a need to clean the cold air before it is finally delivered to the customer which is the house, office, work places, and play areas. The usual filter system does not meet the requirement of a wet air because the filter will soon get clogged up with the salt and also get wet with the surplus water mist, but the centrifugal cyclone  34  can clean the wet air easily without a filter element to be changed so often. In this invention, the centrifugal cyclone separator has been re-designed to become more efficient in collecting dusts particles. Part  31  is the main cylindrical drum body, which is covered at the top by a flat plate  33  that has a center hole, and which is covered by a tapered/frustum at the bottom. Part  35  is the air outlet pipe that passed thru and attached to the center hole of the top cover plate  33 . The outlet pipe  35  is extended by the open bottom pipe  39  into and downward to the lower ¼ point of the drum  31 . The pipe  39  serves as the intake section of the outlet pipe  35 . The lower ⅓ section of the pipe  39  is perforated with air inlet holes  40  to distribute the air movement and to eliminate rushing air flow at the bottom mouth  41 , so that the settling dust at the bottom wall  43  will not flow upward with the air. An inner wall lining drum  36  having perforations  38  is provided and attached by a spacer plate  37  to the inner face of the drum  31  in order to create a stilling chamber in which the dust is forced to settle down to lower basement  50 . The spacer plate  37 , being widefaced that is perpendicular to the flow of the air, serves to stop the air movement and to hold the inner drum  36  a few inches from the main, drum  31 . The inner drum  36  has a plurality of windows  38  all around to serve as trap entrance of dust and surplus water mist in order to get the dust out of the circulating air sooner or faster. The tapered or frustum drum  43  is a downward extension of the inner drum  36  to hold the floor  49  to a good distance below the lip  41  of the air outlet pipe  39 . To create another, stilling chamber, a perforated horizontal floor  45  is attached to the wall  43  at a distance above the floor  49 . On the floor  45 , a plurality of trap windows  44  are provided to serve as entrance for the dust that settle down to the bottom of the cyclone. A plurality of vertical wideface plates  46  are attached to the bottom of the floor  45  to stop the movements of air at the basement chamber below the floor  45  in order to force the dust to settle down on the floor  49 . The tapered drum  42  is a downward extension of the drum  31  to hold the bottom floor  50  which create the lower basement floor that accumulate the settling dusts. An auger type conveyer cleanout  47  is installed on each floor to get the dust out of the basement floors  49  &amp;  50 . The auger blades  47  are attached to and driven by the crank shaft  48  that is held by the bearing  51  and also being turned by the crank arm  52 . The extracted dusts fall down thru the outlet pipe  54  after opening the valve  53 . It should be noted at this point that the effectiveness of the centrifugal cyclone  34  depends how wide is the space between the wall  36  to the outlet pipe  39  and the space between the floor  45  to the lip  41  of the outlet pipe  39 ; hence there is a need to increase the diameters of both drums in order to widen as much as possible the space between the pipe  39  to the wall  36 , and also widen the distance between the pipe lip  41  to the floor  45 . There are many applications for this centrifugal cyclone air cleaner, including its being used as air cleaner in the intake manifold of the car or truck. With the assurance of the cyclone cleaner, the mouth piece of the intake manifold of a car or truck may be faced directly into the wind that approach, the car to increase air pressure that goes into the combustion chamber in order to increase the power output of the car&#39;s engine. This cyclone separator is also needed in the intake manifold of a gas turbine engine to clean the air intake of the engine, the air intake needs to be humidified in order to increase the power out put of the engine. The efficiency of the cyclone in collecting dust depends also upon how evenly the air is circulated in the cyclone. Hence, to insure ever circulation of air around the cyclone, it is best to provide a wide spiral/screw fin around the outlet pipe  39  to be followed by the air going around the trap windows  38  before it gets into the intake lip  41 . 
     FIG.  6 —illustrates a new embodiment for an alternative water mist air cooling blower system, wherein, a water tubing device  4  is formed into a multi-branch tube which is attached to the front safety protection framing of an air blower device  1  so that the misting tube rides with the left/right swinging of the blower  1  and a plurality of water misting nozzles  2 , pointing away from said air blower  1 , are functionally connected/communicated to said water tubing  4  so that the high pressure water in said water tubing  4  gets sprayed at a direction going away from said air blower  1 . The air blower  1  is mounted on a self standing post  6  in order to blow and distribute the cold air more efficiently. A flexible water supply hose  5  is connected and communicated to the water tubing  4  by the coupling connector  3 . The water supply hose  5  is then connected/communicated to a water supply faucet, then open the water faucet and run the air blower in order to produce a wind that contains water mist. Due to the fineness of the water particles flying with the wind, the water evaporates instantly thereby absorbing great quantities of heat out from the carrier wind, thereby, the wind becomes cool instantly. 
     FIG.  7 —illustrates a new embodiment for a water misting system, wherein, a plurality of water misting nozzles  2  are functionally connected/communicated to a flexible water tubing  4 , and then the water tubing  4  is attached circling around to the front safety protection framing of the air blower  1 , which in effect, replaces the multi-branch water tubing to form of a water misting device  4  in FIG.  6 . This circling water misting tubing is made long enough so that it is made into a multi-circle in a concentric formation and then attached to the front of a large air blower or in front of an array of multi-blowers. 
     FIG.  8 —illustrates a new embodiment for a high pressure water supply system, wherein, the water tank  8  is filled up with water up to the level  12  and the remaining space above the water inside the tank  8  is filled up with Dry Ice  11  by passing the dry ice thru the tank&#39;s mouth  10  and then place the cover air tight,—in order to pressurize the water inside the tank  8 . The high pressure water created inside the tank  8  is then supplied to the water misting device  4  thru the inter-communicating water hose  5 . The second advantage of having a dry ice  11  in the water tank  8  is that—ice-cold water mist comes out from the misting nozzles  2 , in which case the wind becomes even cooler. In the absence of available Dry Ice, the compressed air source  2  is used to inject/introduce pressurizing agent or compressed air into the water tank  8  thru the inter-communicating air hose  7 , and then the compressed air is trapped inside the water tank  8  by closing the air gate  9 . This high pressure water tank  8  system has been created to be used in places where the pressure of the water supply is low, and therefore, it is necessary to step up the water pressure before the water gets thru the water misting nozzles  2  in order to produce a very fine mist water spray for the sole purpose of enhancing evaporation of water in the wind. There are many ways and alternatives by which to produce high pressure water supply to the misting nozzles  2  including a bottle of water/water tank being hanged to the top of the tree to produce an elevated water, and a series of bottled water  15  into which compressed air is introduced, said battles showing the water level  16  inside the bottle  15 , which are interconnected by air hoses  7 ,  13 , and  5  thru the air tight cover  14 , of which ideas are hereby applied for proprietary rights. 
     FIG.  9 —illustrates a new embodiment for a water mist air blower cooling system, and alternatively for water distillation/desalination system, wherein, a vacuumized evaporation chamber /air cooling system  1  is supplied with water mist thru a plurality of water atomizer nozzles  2  which is supplied with water thru the water tube  3  and also supplied with compressed air thru air tube  4 , both water and air coming out of the nozzle  2 . The main water supply pipe  5  supplies water to the water tube  3  while the main air pipe  6  supplies compressed air to the air tube  4 . The vacuumized air duct  7  is made strong against implosion to withstand the outside atmospheric pressure in order to form the vacuum evaporation chamber  14 . This evaporation chamber  14  is made large enough to provide distance/chance for the water mist to evaporate and same chamber  14  is made spacious enough to be able to accommodate the condensation radiator  8  in which a high pressure water vapor, and due to cold temperature surroundings brought about by rapid evaporation of water mist in the vacuum chamber  14 , and then the resulting condensed water drops down thru header pipe  10  and actuates the float valve  20  by its own buoyant power or by a sensor. The water then drops onto the container  18  thru the water drain pipe  9  after being released by the float valve  20 , and accumulates as drinking water  19 . It should be noted that the radiator condenser  8  may also be supplied by highly humid air coming from the clean vapor pipe  32 . The excess water mist, that did not evaporate or not carried away by the wind inside the air duct  7 , drops down at the bottom of the air duct  7  to form the excess water  13  which drains down thru the outlet pipe  15  and get stored into the recycle pipe  16  in the form of a stored water  17 . The uncondensed water vapor from the radiator  8  is collected by the header pipe  10 , and by way of the vapor&#39;s own pressure, it is directed by the air pipe  11  to get into the compressed air supply  6  and being used to atomized water thru the blades  67  and  68  and by the turbine blades  64  all of which rotate counterclockwise as driven by the inner pipe drive shaft  66 . The suction process from the chamber  14  is made more effective by the incorporation of the clockwise turbine blades  63  in opposite rotation against and interphased with the aforesaid turbine blades  64 . The suction process and the compression process upon the water mist/vapor mixture is made final by the large diameter centrifugal blades  69  acting at the tail end of the turbine pump  63  and  64 . Both the centrifugal blades  69  and the turbine blades  63  are driven clockwise by the outer pipe drive shaft  65 . The outer tips of the centrifugal blades  69  produce compressed air which gets out thru the outlet  49  and gets into the air supply pipe  6  to run the atomizers  2 . Most of the compressed air/watermist/water vapor mixture at the outer tips of the centrifugal blades  69  are forced to get out thru the outlet  61 , and the centrifugal force acting upon said wet mixture is stopped by the instilling plates  24  that are radially attached to the inside walls of the compressor housing shell  22 , hence, the wet compressed air is forced to move toward the axial center of the housing shell  22 . The excess unevaporated water mist is catched and collected by the collection ring gutter  26 , also collected by the circular/cylindrical confining inner walls of shell  22 , and also collected by the instilling plate  24 , hence, the cold air entering the air duct  32  is cleaned out of water mist. By means of gravity, the water collected by the catch gutter  26  automatically drops down to the tank  28  thru the outlet  25  that is limited by an electronically operated float valve, to form the stored water  30 . The oppositely rotating pipe drive shafts  65  and  66  are each driven by separate pulleys that rotate oppositely against each other or are driven by oppositely rotating gas turbines wherein the air duct  32  is already the combustion chamber of the gas turbine engine.—This type of gas turbine engine has been claimed in the U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/999,729 now pending. The humid cold air in the Air duct  32 , if not used for the gas turbine engine, is then directed into a place where cold air is needed. 
     For purposes of water desalination, a plurality of said centrifugal pump  69  are assembled co-axially in an array of multistage formation and intercommunicated by the air duct  32  thru the common drive shaft  65  and provided with the instilling plates  24  in order to step up the vacuum and the compression of the water vapor which is then directed back to enter the condensation radiator  8  to produce the drinking water  19 . The un-condensed water vapor exits from the radiator  8  thru the header pipe  10  and gets re-cycled thru the misting nozzle  2  until it finally gets back into the condensation radiator  8 . 
     IT SHOULD BE NOTED AT THIS POINT, THAT, AS THE WATER VAPOR IS COMPRESSED, IT BECOMES HOT, HENCE, THE RADIATOR  8  IS EXTENSIVELY EXTENDED OUTSIDE THE FRONT END OF THE VACUUM AIR DUCT  7 , SO THAT A MAJOR PORTION OF THE RADIATOR  8  IS EXPOSED TO ANOTHER SEPARATE SET OF WATER MIST AIR BLOWER COOLING SYSTEM TO REMOVE THE HEAT CONTENT OF THE COMPRESSED WATER VAPOR AND TO ENHANCE CONDENSATION INSIDE THE RADIATOR  8  AS IT GETS INSIDE THE VACUUM CHAMBER  14 . 
     FIG.  10 —illustrates a new embodiment for a cyclone-type water-mist separator to dry the cold wind that is mixed with water mist, and at the same time serves as a centrifugal air pump, wherein, a plurality of wideface centrifugal blades  9  are radially attached to and rotationaly driven by the ring-type electric motor  12  that is attached to and around the lower section of the air outlet duct  35 . The cylindrical wall  31  is the main outer shell of the separator device. The outer shell  31  is extended down to the bottom in the form of a frustum with a waste disposal sliding door  14 . With perforation windows  38 , the inner cylindrical wall  36  is installed co-axially with the cylindrical wall  31  and attached to the outer wall  31  by means of the instilling/spacer plates  37  thereby creating a stilling chamber in between the outer shell  31  and the inner wall  36  into which, by way of centrifugal force, the excess water mist is collected and settled down to the bottom waste door  14 . The upper inner wall  36  is extended down to the bottom without perforations in the form of the bottom frustum shell  32  creating a waste chamber below the upper stilling chamber. To create a lower stilling chamber, the perforated frustum shell  36  is installed co-axially with and attached to the bottom frustum shell  32  by spacer/stilling plates  37 , and the created second level bottom waste chamber is provided with waste disposal door  13 . The motor  12  and the lower section of the exit air duct  35  are supported by a plurality of radial plate stilling walls  11  which attached the motor  12  to the upper inner wall  36 . The upper outer drum shell  31  and the perforated inner drum shell  36  are held together at the top by the top cover plate  30  which is provided with a central air entrance circular hole formed around the outlet air duct  35 . The air scrawl case  33  is placed around the outlet air duct  35  and covering the central air entrance circular hole of the cover plate  30 . The air inlet air duct  7  is horizontally communicated eccentrically to the scrawl case  33  at the left of the air outlet air duct  35  which should be in accordance with the clockwise revolution of the centrifugal blades  9 . Due to the centrifugal action of the revolving blades  9 , a centrifugal force is created acting upon the molecule of the air and upon the molecules of the water mist, thereby pressing the water mist and the air against the perforation windows  38 , and at the same time, due to the movements of the air towards the walls  36 , the central space around the outlet air duct  35  is vacated, thereby creating a vacuum around the air duct  35 . The vacuum created at the center sucks the air from the scrawl case  33  thru the center hole of the cover plate  30 . Due to the stilling power of the radial vertical plates  11 , the moving air loses its centrifugal force, and it is forced to move downward by the air pressure created at the outer tips of the centrifugal blades  9 , hence, the air is forced to exit out thru the open bottom of air duct  35 . The excess water mist particles are trapped into and get settled inside the stilling chamber between the outer wall  31  and the inner wall  36 . 
     IT SHOULD BE NOTED AT THIS POINT THAT THIS CYCLONE-CENTRIFUGAL PUMP IS ALSO USED TO CLEAN DUSTY AIR BY MAKING THE DRUM  31  LARGER IN DIAMETER. 
     FIG.  11 —illustrates a new embodiment for an air conditioning unit that produce cold air free of water mist to be supplied into a house, an office, or into a green house or what ever room that is open at the other end, for purposes of cooling the room. This is most applicable in tropical climates or desert places because the cold air being supplied is a humid air. This cooling machine consists of: the section  1  which is a vacuum chamber evaporator made of the drum  7  and in which the water is evaporated by mist spray in order to cool the air in said chamber; the section  2  which is a centrifugal air pump which vacuumizes the evaporator chamber  1  and which removes excess water mist from the air as it expels the air thru its outlet; the section  3  which is a centrifugal air duct to further clean the air out of excess water mist; and the delivery air duct  4  having a dispersal mouth piece. Sitting on a support footing  34  is the motor  12  which, by way of the pipe shaft  65 , drives the centrifugal blade  69  to suck the air out from the evaporator chamber  1  and further expel the air into the spiral air duct  3 . The vacuum sensor  31  governs the operation of the throttle  23  so that there will be a steady vacuum pressure inside the evaporation chamber  1 . To produce the mist  21  inside the chamber  1 , compressed air is supplied by the air pipe  11  and the air is released thru the nozzle  13 , and at the same time during this process, water is released thru the nozzle  13  by the water pipe  5 . The collected water by the centrifugal pump  2  drops down to the water tank  18  and by the float valve  20 , the water is automatically released thru the outlet pipe  25  if the gate valve  30  is left opened. Some of the water collected by the gutter  26  are also released thru the outlet pipe  25  that is directed connected to said gutter  26 . The center bearing  29  holds the pipe drive shaft  65  on center with the chamber  1 . Plate  22  serves as the housing scrawl shell of the centrifugal pump  2 , a plurality of the windows  11  serve as air passage from chamber  1  into pump  2  thru the shell  22  and also as passage window from air pump  2  to the air duct  3 . Part  27  is a frustum drum at the base of the centrifugal blade  69 . To make a centrifugal action of the air passing thru the centrifugal air duct  3 , a smaller drum  66  that is provided with spiral fins  17  is inserted into the center of the air duct  7 . The water collected by the walls of the centrifugal air duct drops down thru the exit pipe  15 , thru the inter-collector pipe  16 , down thru the water tank  18 , and the water is released by action of the float valve  20 . The waste water is then collected into the tank  28  after dropping down thru the exit pipe  25 . Finally, the clean cold air is delivered by the pipe air duct  7  thru the dispersal mouth piece  39 . The compressed air outlet pipe  49  supplies compressed air to the nozzle  13 . 
     FIG.  12 —illustrates the same air conditioning unit of FIG. 11 but with additional centrifugal air pumps which are intercommunicated with the first pump in a series in order to make a multistage air pump  2  and in order to increase the effectiveness of the vacuuming process upon the chamber  1  and to speed up the production cold air supply. One special feature of this design is that last stage of the pump  2 , the plate  67  is fixed, detached from the centrifugal blade  69  and does not go with the revolution of the blade  69 —in order to or so that the plate  67  will bear all the air pressure difference from its front to its rear, while the rest of the preceding stages of the pump  2 , the centrifugal blade  69  is welded to the plate  67  and revolve together in order to minimize leakage of compressed air backflow. As shown in the figure, each of the pumps in section  2  is a collector of excess water that did not dissolve into the air, hence, each pump has a collector/storage tank  18  to take hold of the collected water. Additionally, the vacuum evaporator air duct  7  may be further elongated for some length in order to provide more travel distance for the water mist to have time for complete evaporation. 
     FIG.  13 —illustrates a new embodiment for a distillation machine using the evaporator section  1  and the multistage vac/compressor section  2  of FIG. 12 in combination with a water mist type air cooling unit/desalination unit  1  of FIG.  9 . For the purpose of distilling any liquid, including alcohol, oil, organic mater, top water, and sea water for desalination, the throttle  23  is permanently closed so that the only gas being compressed is the vapor from the material being distilled. By way of the multistage pump section  2 , the vapor is sucked from the vacuum evaporator  1  by the pump section  2  and then compressed same vapor by the same pump section  2  into the high pressure condensation radiator  8  that is subjected to cold surroundings—such as the water mist evaporation chamber of section  9 ,—to facilitate condensation of the compressed vapor. The high compression in the radiator  8  is attained by limiting the release outlet of the gate valve  14  in section  9 . The gate valve  16  regulates the passage of compressed air being supplied to nozzl purposes of desalination, the evaporation chamber of section  9  is also further elongated to provide more time for the water mist to evaporate, and sea water is mist prayed thru the nozzle  2  of section  9 . The humid air is then sucked and compressed by the multistage pump unit of section  9 , and then feed the compressed vapor into the condensation radiator  8 . It should be noted that, for desalination purposes, there is not additional air coming from the outside atmosphere that come into play in the misting process. The first compressed air used at the atomizer nozzle  2  is the same compressed air being recycled over and over to pass thru the nozzle  2 . This recycling of the air is made possible by the regulating action of the gate valves  14  and  16 . The distilled water is then collected by the tank  19  after draining down thru pipe  9 . 
     FIG.  14 —illustrates a new embodiment by which the clouds  21  are sucked down thru a high altitude vacuumized intake tower trunk section  5  by a multi-stage vac/compressor pump  2 , and ram the clouds/vapor into the high pressure radiator condenser  8 ,—for purposes of forced condensation of the clouds and being collected into a drinking water without waiting for the rain. This configuration is the same machine as shown in FIG. 13, except for the construction of the tall suction tower trunk  5  which replaced the vacuum evaporation chamber section  1 , because what is being condensed in this machine now is the ready made salt-free vapor by the clouds. This cloud condensation machine may be built on top of the mountain in order to minimize the construction of the tall tower trunk  5 . Depending upon the atmospheric pressure, the clouds  21  may be passing below the top in-take window  39 , hence, the throttle valve  37  should be closed, and the upper side windows  38  should also be closed by the window cover  36 , while the lower side windows should be opened. If the clouds  21  are passing up to the top of the trunk  5 , the top window  39  and the upper side windows should be opened and the lower side window should be closed by sliding the window covers  36 . The main structure  35  of the trunk may be made of a large pipe or may be made of a large diameter inflated post and a plurality of vertical suction hoses being hanged around the sides of said inflated large post. 
     FIG.  14 A—illustrates a new embodiment by which to create a new structural design for a tall/high tower inflatable suction trunk  35  to reach up to the clouds in order to suck or to collect the clouds. The plurality of vertical inflated posts  2  are spacedly attached around a plurality of vertically spaced inflated rings  4  and an air tight sheet  6  is wrapped around the whole bundle of posts  2  to form the trunk  35 . The windows  38  are cut out on and around the sheet  6  at various levels to provide entrance windows for the clouds  21  being sucked into the trunk  35 . The spaces, created in-between the posts  2  and the spaces created by the enclosure of the sheet  6 ,—serve as the vertical passage of the cloud  21  in going down to the compressor machine on the ground. In the process of erecting the tower trunk  35 , the posts  2  are inflated at low pressure just enough to strut the wrap sheet  6  when assembled. Then the sheet  6  is wrapped around the post assembly and the spaces created by sheet  6  are inflated with hot air so that the whole assembled trunk  35  will float up in sky. If the hot air is not enough to float/lift the trunk  35 , then a plurality of hot air balloons is used to lift the top/one end of the tower trunk  35  while its base end will be anchored to the ground,—in order to erect the tower trunk  35 . While the tower trunk  35  is still being lifted erect by the hot air balloons, the principal posts  2  are further inflated to the final required pressure. 
     FIG.  15 —illustrates a new embodiment for a distillation machine by the same process as in FIG. 13, which is the same apparatus as shown in FIG. 13, except that there is now a heating system  6  in this FIG. 15 by which to heat up the water and the compressed air before being sprayed by the atomizer nozzle  13  into the evaporation chamber  7 . The heater is any conventional heating system, such as electrical heater, or a natural gas burner  50  thru tubes  22  getting thru the evaporation chamber  7  to provide heat in the chamber  7  and also to provide heat to the multilevel pre-heating radiator  51  which is a zigzag multilevel chamber thru which the water pipe  5  and compressed air pipe  49  pass thru in coil form before being connected to the atomizer  13 . As a second alternative, by using trash,—such as crude oil, asphalt, waste organic materials, and coal,—as fuel, the smokeless burner  46  is designed to supply heat to help in the evaporation of the water being distilled. The smokeless trash burner is comprised of: the chamber  46  that serves as container in which the trash  44  is burned; the bin  45  serving to receive and to pour the trash  44  into the chamber  46 ; the piston  47  being right below the bin  45  pushes the trash  44  into the burning chamber  46  thereby forming a stack pile of trash  44  to prevent the entrance of cold air from the bin  45 ; the torch  50  that ignites the trash  44  and then turned down to a small flame after the trash  44  is self burning; the pre-heating air in-take manifold  36  to conduct the fresh air up and around the hot chimney  37  to make the fresh air supply very hot and the attic  38  above the combustion chamber  46  further heat up the air supply; the nipple nozzles  39  further heat up the air supply while conducting it and distributing it directly onto the top of the trash  44  in order to bring the oxygen supply nearest to the burning trash  44  to attain complete oxidation by burning the trash from the top; the throttle  41  regulates the air supply so that most the air supply will pass thru the nozzles  39 ; the ash collector pipe  43  that serves to trap the ash by opening the gate valve  42 ; the hot chimney  37  being provided with perforation holes  40  on its side facing the downward section of the intake manifold  36  so that only the pre-heated air can get into the hot chimney in order to further completely oxidize the gas fumes that had escaped the burning nozzles  39 ; the radiator  22  that take hot air from the chimney  37  and to distribute heat inside the evaporator chamber  7 ; the header  23  that takes the hot air from the radiator  22  and passes it on to the multilevel pre-heating radiator  51  into which the water supply pipe and compressed air supply pipe are coiled around to get pre-heated; and the exhaust chimney  33  to throw out the waste hot air. It should be noted at this point that: 1. In order to attain smokeless trash burning, the burning process must start from the top of the trash instead to burning the trash from the bottom which effects distillation of the trash; 2. Due to the high elevation of the chimney  33 , the hot air in the chimney, being much lighter than the cold surrounding air, produces a vacuum effect upon the whole hot air passages, hence, the nozzle  39  will be blowing air supply strongly onto the trash fuel  44 . As a third alternative, more natural gas is released by the torch  50  to burn a large flame under the nozzles  39  thereby maintaining the required temperature inside evaporation chamber. As a fourth alternative, hot geothermal steam from the volcano is connected to the pipe  43  and the gate valve  42  opened in order to supply heat into the evaporation chamber thru the chimney  37 . As a fifth alternative, the exhaust tail pipe of a fuel burning engine is connected to the pipe  43  in order to supply heat into the evaporation chamber in order to take benefits from the waste heat from the engine. 
     FIG.  16 —illustrates a new embodiment for a new design for a desalination device which is practically the same apparatus principle and purposes as the previous FIG.  13  and FIG.  15  and as had been discussed very well in FIG. 13, except for some changes, such as, a new design for a piston type multistage van/compressor pump section  8  now had replaced the centrifugal pump section  2  of FIG. 15, and the solar trap heating system section  7  is in place in addition to the trash burning heating system section  6  in FIG. 15, and additionally, there is now the throttle  23  for the evaporation vacuum chamber in section  9 , in which case, section  9  is now also a distillation machine. The herewith Piston type Multistage air pump as indicated in this FIG. 16 as Section  8  has been approved as claim-1 in the U.S. Pat. No. 5,094,595 dated Mar. 10, 1992, hence does not have to be discussed any more, but its function is to vacuum the chamber  7  and to pressurize the condensation radiator  8 , for purposes of forced evaporation and forced condensation, and in this case, this vac/compressor pump is being driven by the electric motor  12  that works in a vacuum environment, said pump being made of glass, ceramics and or hard plastics to be resistant against acid/salt action. The solar trap heating system, indicated herein as Section  7 , consisting of a heat insulated s floor and side wall with the top cover of a transparent multilayer sheets of roofs with air spaces between sheets, has been claimed in the U.S. Pat. No. 5,507,943 dated Apr. 16, 1996, hence, no need to describe it very well, but its function in this case is to pre-heat the water in pipe  5  and to pre-heat the compressed air in pipe  35 , which pipes are also passing thru inside the fuel burning hot radiator  6  to further heat up the water pipe  5  and the compressed air pipe  35 ,—before finally coming out to spray water/vapor thru the nozzle  13  into the chamber  7 . The tank  31  supplies water thru pipe  5  into the evaporator chamber  7 , while the tank  32  supplies water thru pipe  34  into the evaporator chamber of section  9 . The compressed air supplied by section  9  thru gate valves  14  and  16 , thru pipe  35  which serves compressed air into the atomizer nozzle  2  of section  9  and also serves compressed air into the atomizer nozzle  13  of section  6 . The clean salt free humid air produced from section  9 , after passing thru the multistage turbine/centrifugal pumps  64  and  69 , is then directed into the combustion chamber of an oppositely rotating gas turbine engine which drives the pumps  64  and  69  in addition to driving an electric generator. 
     FIG.  17 —illustrates a new embodiment for a new design for a large scale vacuum evaporation chamber, to be used as evaporation chambers in FIG. 3, FIG. 12, in FIG. 13, in FIG.  15  and in FIG. 16, comprising: a large structural pipe  12  that is strong against implosion, which may be made of concrete, wood, glass, steel, stainless steel, or plastics; a structural rib  14  made of same materials as the pipe  12 —serving as an arc strut attached to and to reinforce pipe  12  against implosion; a lining or curtain  16  made of materials resistant to acid or salt action, such as, stainless steel, plastics, or glass, etc.,—which is attached to the ribs  14 ,—the purpose of which is to keep the structures  12  and  14  stay away from corrosion and to keep the water vapor stay clean; a plurality of misting atomizer nozzles  13  installed inside the chamber thru a plurality of air pipes  49  and water pipes  5  that are inserted thru holes piercing the main structural pipe  12  and curtain sheet  16  at the top section of the chamber in order to spray mist  21  from the ceiling of the chamber; a plurality of weep holes thru and along the ceiling of the curtain sheet  16  to equalize pressure at the back of the curtain  16  with the pressure inside the chamber to protect the curtain sheet  16  from being crushed; the rib  14  is provided with chamfer at the bottom to produce a space passage hole  22  to enable condensates to travel or flow on the floor of the main structural pipe  12  until it feeds and drops into the drain pipe  25  and to accumulate into the waste tank  18  which is also a vacuum tank; the upper gate valve  30  and the lower gate valve  30  are provided so that while the upper valve is closed, the lower valve can be opened in order to drain down the liquid from tank  18  into the open pan  28 ; the railway tract  31  and the walking platform  33  both resting on the support tie crossbeams  32  being provided for use by maintenance crew ridding on a rail cart or just walking on the platform  33 ; the chamfer  34  on the rail crossbeams  32  is provided to allow liquids to flow/drain along the floor of the curtain  16 . To prevent salt action on the main structures  12  and  14 , the chamber is pressurized with compressed air and then distilled water is back flowed thru the drain pipe  25  into the back of the curtain  16  until ½ full, from to time, in order to dissolve all possible corrosive materials that accidentally got into the space behind the curtain sheet  16 . 
     FIG.  18 —illustrates a new embodiment for a new design for a vacuum evaporation chamber, which shows the detail view of the cross-section  18  of the preceding FIG. 17, comprising: the longitudinal section view of the main structural pipe  12 ; the cross-section view of the structural arc rib  14  attached to, around and across to reinforce the main pipe  12 ; the longitudinal section view of the curtain sheet  16  attached to the rib  14 ; the weep hole  9  on the curtain sheet  16 ; the compressed air supply pipe  49  piercing the ceiling of the main pipe  12  and also piercing the ceiling of the curtain sheet  16 , and bent to hang a long way along the ceiling of the curtain  16  with a plurality of downward branches to supply a plurality of atomizer nozzles  13 ; the water supply pipe  5  also piercing thru the ceiling of the main pipe  12  and thru the ceiling of the curtain  16 , said water pipe  5  also hangs a long way along the ceiling of the curtain  16  and parallel to the air pipe  49 , and which also have branches  6  connected to and to supply the nozzle  13  with water in order to spray waster mist  21  into the vacuum evaporator chamber; a longitudinal view of the rail tract  31  and a longitudinal section view of the walk platform  33  both connected to and resting on the railway ties  32  which in turn rest/connected to the floor of the curtain sheet  16  which in turn rests on and is connected to the rib  14 ; the drain pipe  27  piercing the floor of the curtain sheet  16  and also piercing the floor of the main pipe  12  to drain excess water from the floor of the curtain sheet  16  and to store the water to the tank  18  thru the upper and lower gate valves  30  to finally drop the water to the pan  19 ; the drain pipe  25  piercing the floor of the main pipe  12  to drain the excess water from the floor of the main pipe  12  and to store the water to corresponding tank  18  thru the upper and lower gate valves  30  to finally drop down the waste water into the waste pan  28  thru the pipe  26 ; and the vacuum sealers  2  provided and clamped around the pipes piercing the main pipe  12  and around the pipes piercing the curtain sheet  16  in order to prevent entrance of outside air into the vacuum chamber. This evaporation chamber should be built into a spacious large diameter pipe or into a large tunnel in order to provide enough travel distance and enough time for the water mist to evaporate or dissolve into the air before touching the floor or walls of the chamber. This chamber has the potential to be built into a long large one mile pipe in which a construction/maintenance truck is driven into to ease up the job of the maintenance crew, and a plurality of the this long pipe chamber are laid side-by-side on the ground or laid floating on the ocean in order to desalinate a large quantity of drinking water, see part 15—FIG. 1 of U.S. Pat. No. 5,507,943. 
     FIG.  19 —illustrates a new embodiment and a new design for a small scale distillation machine using the same principle of the water mist vacuum evaporation chamber, which may be adapted for house hold use and aboard ship use for distillation or desalination purposes. To prevent contamination of the distilled water or any distillate, and to make this machine resistant to the action of acids or salt water, the whole apparatus, including the vac/compressor pump, should be made of glass, or plastics or plexiglas, ceramics, or stainless steel. The main body drum  10  and its top and bottom cover  11  may alternatively be made of concrete, or lumber or riprapped stones/bricks, provided there is the curtain sheet/wall  34 , having a pressure equalizer weep hole  9 , that is resistant to acid or salt action. In this case, this distillation device is comprised of: the drum  10  having internal ribs  20  and  21  welded to drum  10 , also made up of materials resistant to the action of acid and salt, to serve as reinforcement against implosion; the four support posts  29  at one end to dispose the drum  10  in erect posture, and which can be installed in the garage or outside the house, or in the boat, or on the beach; the glass windows  14  which are attached to the outside face of the drum  10  by the “Z” bar frame  18  welded to the drum  10 , in which frame, the glass  14  and its air seal is slided into; the “Z” bar  19  being removably attached to the drum  10  by a screw to lock the glass plate in place; the acid/salt resistant curtain sheet  34  with the pressure equalizer weep hole  9 , made up of stainless steel, plastics or Plexiglas, glass, and/or ceramics, the ends lips of which are folded over to the top and bottom lips of the drum  10 , said curtain being in the form of a large drum so that its outside wall barely touches the face of the ribs  21 ; the top cover plate  11  having holes  15 , having a rim  13  that is being clipped over to the lips of the drum  10  by the adjustable wing-nut bolts  17  which are anchored to the drum  10  by brackets; the compressed air supply pipe  49  which pierced the top cover plate  11 , and which branches into a plurality of atomizer nozzles  2  into and inside the chamber; the liquid supplier pipe  5  which pieced the top cover plate  11  and which branches into plurality of tubes that are connected and communicated to the atomizer nozzles  2  in order to spray the mist  3  into the vacuum evaporator chamber; the bottom cover plate  11  likewise having the holes  15  for the heater pipes  35  to pass thru and a hole  26  thru which the excess unevaporated liquid or brine will drop down thru a collector pipe, and having a rim  13  that is provided with brackets  22 ,  23 , and  24  for purposes of holding the lock bolt  17  which fastens the cover plate  11  to the bottom lips of the drum  10  by way of the other brackets welded on to the sides of the trunk  10 ; the stiffener bar plate  12  welded to the outer face of each top cover plate  11  and the bottom cover plate  11  to make said cover plates resistant against implosion; the gusset plates  28  with connector holes  27  which is an outward extension of the stiffener  12 ; the support plate posts  29  having connector holes  27  by which said post is connected to the gusset plate  28 , said post being made light weight by cutting off the large holes  30 , said plate posts being made stiff by welding the plate bars  31 ,  32 , and  33  on its edges; the vapor suction mouth  36  communicated to the suction pipe  37  which is communicated to the vac/compressor pump  38  which in turn is communicated by a pipe to the high pressure vapor cold radiator-type condenser  39  which is subsequently communicated to and delivers the distillate by a pipe to the high pressure cold air-liquid separator  40  which is in turn connected to and delivers the high pressure distillate by pipe to the high pressure storage tank  41 , said air-liquid separator  40  being also communicated by the pipe  49  to the same air supply pipe  49  at the top cover plate  11  in order to blow compressed air thru the nozzles  2 ; the gate valve  42  being provided to release the distillate or drinking water; and the plurality of heater pipes  35  piercing thru the hole  15  of the bottom cover plate  11  into the vacuum chamber  10  and out of same chamber thru the hole  15  of the top cover plate  11  to bring heat energy to speed up the evaporation process inside the vacuum chamber, said heater pipe  35  may get heat energy from electricity, or from any fuel burning engine, from nuclear power plants, from solar heat collectors, from the hot water in the garage of the house, or from trash incinerators. Note: that since the radiator condenser  39  needs cold matter to get in touch with, the condenser pipes may be placed inside the cold water supply pipe that is buried underground to heat up the water supply before it gets into the water heater at the garage or before it gets into the kitchen and into the washing machines. 
     FIG.  20 —illustrates a top view of the top cover plate  11  of the vacuum drum  10  of FIG. 19, showing: the circular plate  11 ; the eight equally spaced holes  15  thru which the eight heater pipes  35  pierced the said cover plate  11 ; the holes  16  thru which the liquid supply pipe  5  and the compressed air supply pipe  49  of FIG. 19 pierced the top plate  11 ; the stiffener plate bars  12 A welded crisscrossing on top of the cover plate  11  to make said plate  11  strong against implosion; the additional flat bars welded in an octagonal formation on top of said plate  11  to further stiffen the cover plate  11 ; and the bracket  24  that holds the lock bolt  17  of FIG. 19 on to the drum  10 . 
     FIG.  21 —illustrates a bottom view of the bottom cover plate  11  of FIG. 19, comprising: the plate  11  having eight holes  15  thru which the eight heater pipes  35  of FIG. 19 pierced the bottom plate  11  in getting into the chamber  10 ; the hole  25  thru which the suction pipe  37  pierced the bottom cover plate  11  in getting into the chamber  10 ; the hole  26  thru which the unevaporated liquid or brine drops down thru a collector pipe; the stiffener flat bars  12  welded crisscrossing on the bottom face of the bottom cover plate  11 ; the gusset plate  28  being an extension of the stiffener bar  12 , said gusset having holes  27  by which it is bolted to the support posts  29  the bottom end of which being welded to the flat foot  33 ; and the flat bar  31  welded to the outer edge of the plate posts  29  to make said post stiff. 
     FIG.  22 —illustrates a new embodiment and a new structural design for a light low cost vacuum evaporation chamber  1 , which may be disposed erect or disposed laid horizontal long pipeline, adaptable for use as evaporation chamber in FIG. 3, FIG. 9, FIG. 13, FIG. 15, FIG. 16, FIG. 17, FIG. 18, and FIG. 19 in desalination of sea water, comprising: an inner curtain cylindrical wall  2  having a weep hole  16  that balances the pressure between inside the chamber  2  and the outside of the chamber  2 , in which case, though chamber  2  is a vacuum, it does not carry any pressure from the outside atmosphere even if there is a leak from the corrugated wall  6  or from the cylindrical outside wall  8  hence does not have to be strong, said curtain wall  2  may be made of any acid/salt resistant materials, such as, plastics sheets, plastic panels, plexiglas, stainless steel, aluminum alloys, glass, ceramics, etc., which are readily available in the market; a main air barrier cylindrical structural wall  8 , which may be made up of cheaper materials such as rolled steel plate, galvanized iron sheets, aluminum alloys, concrete, composite fiberglass, wood, chrome plated metal sheets, plastics sheets, plexiglas sheets, and stainless steel sheets; a main structural corrugated arc wall  6  that serves as strut frame to prevent collapse of the outer wall  8  due to implosion, which may be in the form of a molded plastics, or a plurality of stacked ring sheets that are alternately reversed with each other and glued/welded together at the edges to form a circular column, the outer crest of each corrugation being attached by bolts, screws, or by glue weld  14  to the inner face of wall  8 , which may be done by the process of electroplating, in order to function as a truss structure, said corrugated cylinder  6  may also be attached to the outer face of the inner curtain wall  2  by means of the fastener  14  to make the walls of the chamber more rigid against bending and against implosion; a thick cylindrical wall  10  to make the lip  12  of the chamber rigid, and which is made even more rigid by the structural flat ring  4  interconnecting the ends of the outer cylinder  8  to the lip structure  10  by means of glue or by weld. 
     There are many available new configurations into which the vacuum evaporation chamber and its accompanying machinery may be made in order to make the chamber work and to maximize utilization of the chambers, including floating structures, floating sea wall, floating platforms, submerged platforms, underwater pipe houses by having sub-chambers and subdivision cross walls in the vacuum evaporation chambers, underwater transportation, and underwater fishing submarines, and chambers made into the likeness of a large fish on wheels and as a boat, of which new ideas, the herein inventor reserves all proprietary rights and hereby apply for protection by Letters Patent.

Technology Category: 4