Botijo

A botijo, also called búcaro in Spanish, is a traditional Spanish porous clay container designed to contain water. The botijo has the property that once filled, it cools the water that it contains, acting as an evaporative cooler.

The "botijo" (c. 1904), by Joaquín Sorolla i Bastida. Private collection.

The botijo has a wide belly and one or more mouths where it is filled and one or more outputs called pitón or pitorro to drink from. The botijo is a typical element of Spanish culture and may vary in shape, color and material.

The búcaro de Indias is a special type, made of fragrant clay from Mexico, that was prized in Europe.

Operation

The operating principle of the botijo is as follows: the stored water is filtered through the pores of the clay and in contact with the outside dry environment (characteristic of Mediterranean climate), it evaporates, producing a cooling (2.219 kilojoules per gram of evaporated water). The key for cooling it, is by the evaporation of bleed water, as the water evaporates, it extracts thermal energy from the water stored inside the jug.

gollark: I mean, currently, it doesn't make a huge difference.
gollark: I have a buffer. The reactor is set to go on when it's below full.
gollark: Yes, it makes a lot of power and I don't need most of it.
gollark: Well, mine is at -80, so whatever.
gollark: You mean, it makes you try and get heat change to 0 or what?

See also

Porron - another distinctively Hispanic vessel

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