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Urine doesn't belong on the floor, and it definitely doesn't belong on our clothes. An experimental new urinal design could ...
The researchers published a recent paper on their anti-splashback efforts and novel urinal designs in Oxford University Press ...
New urinal designs reduce splashback by optimizing surface angles, improving hygiene, and enhancing accessibility. A urinal ...
A urinal designed to avoid urine splashback on the user and the floor will improve sanitation, bathroom cleanliness, and user experience.
Three-dimensional renderings of urinals. From left to right: Duchamp’s “La Fontaine,” a contemporary commercial model, Cornucopia, and Nautilus. A urinal designed to avoid urine splashback ...
And as any urinal user knows, there are still drawbacks—or, rather, splashbacks. While most people only occasionally experience the unpleasant splash, pee droplets add up. A 2019 study estimated ...
Measurements confirmed that under high-splash conditions, the Nautilus design reduced splashback by 85-95% compared to commercial urinals. Beyond eliminating splash, the Nautilus design offers ...
Researchers at the University of Waterloo have new designs for urinals they say reduce the ... that water from a kitchen faucet will sometimes splash back violently from dishes during washing.
Then, they designed two urinals to fit the brief – the Cornucopia and the Nautilus – and measured splash under various conditions. Results showed that while conventional designs created ...
That might explain why at no point does the paper, titled “Splash-free urinals for global sustainability and accessibility: Design through physics and differential equations,” use the word “pee.” The ...
A urinal designed to avoid urine splashback on the user and the floor will improve sanitation, bathroom cleanliness, and user experience. Urinal designs have not materially changed in over a century.