Phase 1
Rain detection
The HydroSense layer detects precipitation onset and initializes deployment readiness.
Flagship Product
BioTile™ is VerdaCore's rainfall-activated material system, designed for structured roof release, controlled biodegradation, and decentralised ecological enrichment.
System Visual
The simulation below translates the BioTile™ lifecycle into a house-scale scenario so each rainfall-driven transition is visible and easy to interpret.
BioTile™ release sequence visualized on a recognizable residential shell.
Phase 1
The HydroSense layer detects precipitation onset and initializes deployment readiness.
Phase 2
Bond interfaces soften under calibrated moisture pressure, enabling controlled tile liberation.
Phase 3
Detached modules enter a biodegradable transfer state tuned for post-roof nutrient conversion.
Phase 4
Mineral-rich material distributes across nearby surfaces as decentralised ecological enrichment.
Phase 5
Carbon-active particulates transition into passive atmospheric participation mode.
Phase 6
Ground-level surfaces and edge habitats receive sustained material input and biological lift.
System Architecture
Rain event confidence mapping with passive activation logic.
Structured detachment through moisture-calibrated latch behavior.
Biopolymer matrix tuned for decomposition pacing and nutrient yield.
Surface-agnostic enrichment and passive atmospheric participation.
Materials Science
Low-mass structural core designed for biodegradable transfer and controlled disassembly.
Moisture-sensitive attachment geometry supporting timing-accurate release behavior.
Mineral particles optimized for passive atmospheric interaction during degradation.
FAQ
No. Release is event-responsive and guided by rainfall intensity and duration thresholds.
Yes. The module is designed for retrofit pathways and phased transition from conventional roof systems.
No external power is required. Rainfall itself is the core activation input.
Success is measured by nutrient transfer efficiency, carbon participation time, and urban ecological coverage.