Dry Water Technology: The Science, Process, and Industrial Mixing Solutions Driving the Next Generation of Materials

Introduction: When Liquid Behaves Like a Powder

In advanced material science, some of the most disruptive innovations come from challenging fundamental assumptions.

“Dry water” is one of them.

A material composed of up to 95% water, yet behaving as a free-flowing powder, dry water represents a breakthrough in particle engineering, encapsulation, and surface chemistry. While still emerging in commercial applications, its implications span carbon capture, pharmaceuticals, food processing, and advanced materials development.

At its core, dry water is not just a product—it is a process-driven innovation.

And that process begins with mixing.


What is Dry Water? (Technical Overview)

Dry water is a powdered dispersion of microscopic water droplets, where each droplet is encapsulated by a layer of hydrophobic (water-repelling) silica nanoparticles.

Key Characteristics:

  • Composition: ~95% water, ~5% hydrophobic silica
  • Structure: Discrete droplets (typically 1–100 µm range)
  • Behavior: Free-flowing powder with high surface area
  • Stability: Prevents coalescence of water droplets

Mechanism of Stability:

The hydrophobic silica forms a physical barrier around each droplet, creating a liquid-in-solid dispersion. This prevents droplets from merging and reverting to bulk liquid.

This structure results in:

  • Extremely high interfacial surface area
  • Enhanced gas absorption capability
  • Unique rheological and flow properties

Industrial Applications of Dry Water

Dry water is gaining traction across high-value industries where surface area, encapsulation, and controlled interaction are critical.

1. Carbon Capture & Gas Storage

Dry water can absorb gases such as COâ‚‚ and methane more efficiently than traditional liquids due to its high surface area.

  • Enhanced gas-liquid interaction
  • Potential for methane hydrate formation
  • Applications in energy storage and emissions control

2. Pharmaceutical & Nutraceutical Processing

  • Encapsulation of active ingredients
  • Controlled release formulations
  • Stabilization of moisture-sensitive compounds

3. Food & Flavor Technology

  • Protection of volatile compounds
  • Improved dispersion of liquid flavors into powders
  • Stabilization of emulsions

4. Advanced Materials & Nanotechnology

  • Functional powders
  • Reactive surface systems
  • Carrier systems for catalysts or additives

How Dry Water is Manufactured: A Process Engineering Perspective

Dry water production is not a simple blending operation—it is a highly controlled particle engineering process.

Critical Process Objectives:

  • Create uniform droplet size distribution
  • Achieve complete silica coating of each droplet
  • Prevent agglomeration or coalescence
  • Maintain flowability and stability

Step-by-Step Process Breakdown

1. Controlled Liquid Introduction

Water is introduced into a high-energy mixing environment under controlled flow rates to ensure proper droplet formation.

2. High-Shear Dispersion

Mechanical energy is applied to break the liquid into micron-scale droplets.

  • Shear intensity directly impacts droplet size
  • Uniform energy distribution is critical

3. Hydrophobic Silica Addition

Silica particles are introduced and dispersed simultaneously.

  • Must achieve rapid and uniform distribution
  • Surface coverage must be complete to prevent droplet merging

4. Particle Coating & Stabilization

Silica particles adhere to the droplet surface, forming a protective shell.

  • This step defines final product stability
  • Insufficient coating leads to collapse into liquid

5. Powder Conditioning & Discharge

Final product must maintain:

  • Free-flowing characteristics
  • Minimal agglomeration
  • Consistent particle size distribution

Key Engineering Challenges

Manufacturers attempting dry water production often encounter:

1. Droplet Coalescence

Insufficient shear or poor silica dispersion leads to merging droplets → loss of powder form.

2. Agglomeration

Over-wetting or uneven coating results in clumping and poor flowability.

3. Inconsistent Particle Size Distribution

Leads to unstable product performance and reduced efficiency in applications.

4. Poor Silica Dispersion

Creates incomplete encapsulation and product instability.


Why Mixing Technology Determines Success

Dry water is fundamentally a mixing-limited process.

Success depends on the ability to:

  • Generate consistent shear fields
  • Distribute solids and liquids simultaneously
  • Maintain a fluidized, high-energy mixing zone
  • Control residence time and energy input

This is where standard mixers fail—and where engineered solutions are required.


How PerMix Solves Dry Water Processing Challenges

PerMix brings a process-driven approach to advanced material manufacturing, with mixing technologies specifically designed for particle engineering and encapsulation.


1. PerMix Plow Mixers (High-Intensity Fluidized Mixing)

  • Create a mechanically fluidized bed
  • Enable rapid dispersion of liquids into powders
  • Provide uniform coating conditions

Advantage:
Exceptional for simultaneous droplet formation and silica coating


2. PerMix High-Speed Granulators

  • Deliver intense shear forces
  • Break liquids into fine droplets rapidly
  • Ensure uniform particle formation

Advantage:
Ideal for achieving tight droplet size distribution


3. PerMix Fluidized Zone Mixers

  • Combine mechanical and aerodynamic fluidization
  • Allow precision control of particle interactions

Advantage:
Optimized for coating uniformity and process control


4. PerMix Vacuum Mixing Systems

  • Enable processing under controlled atmospheres
  • Reduce oxidation and contamination risks

Advantage:
Critical for sensitive formulations and advanced materials


Process Optimization Considerations

To successfully scale dry water production, manufacturers must consider:

  • Silica particle size and hydrophobicity
  • Liquid-to-solid ratio
  • Shear energy input (kW/mÂł)
  • Residence time distribution
  • Temperature control (to avoid evaporation or instability)
  • Feeding method (spray vs direct addition)

PerMix systems are engineered to allow fine-tuning of each variable, ensuring repeatable and scalable results.


From R&D to Production: Scaling Dry Water Manufacturing

One of the biggest challenges in dry water processing is scale-up.

What works in a lab often fails in production due to:

  • Changes in energy distribution
  • Differences in mixing dynamics
  • Increased risk of agglomeration

PerMix addresses this with:

  • Scalable mixer geometries
  • Predictable energy input scaling
  • Pilot-to-production validation capabilities

Conclusion: Mixing as a Platform for Innovation

Dry water is more than a novel material—it is a case study in how mixing technology enables innovation.

As industries move toward:

  • Higher performance materials
  • Controlled release systems
  • Advanced encapsulation technologies

The role of mixing evolves from simple blending to precision particle engineering.


Why PerMix Leads in Advanced Mixing Applications

PerMix is not just a mixer manufacturer.

We are a process engineering partner, delivering:

  • Deep understanding of particle behavior
  • Advanced mixing technologies
  • Scalable solutions from R&D to production

Final Thought

In the world of dry water and beyond:

The companies that master mixing…
will define the next generation of materials.