18 August 2015

Water from a book


qz.com has an article about a novel invention:
As many as 358 million people in sub-Saharan Africa do not have reliable access to drinking water. Now, researchers have come up with a book on water safety whose pages can be used to filter water.
Trials done in two dozen contaminated water sites in South Africa, Ghana, Kenya, Haiti, and Bangladesh showed the book, which contains tiny particles of copper and silver, could eliminate almost a hundred percent of bacteria, according to results of the project unveiled at the American Chemical Society’s national meeting that began on 16 August.
Teri Dankovich, from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who has been leading the research on what she calls “the drinkable book” said in one trial, they tested a ditch contaminated with sewage that contained millions of bacteria. “Even with highly contaminated water sources like that one, we can achieve 99.9% purity with our silver-and copper-nanoparticle paper, bringing bacteria levels comparable to those of drinking water in the US,” she said.
Each page is embedded with silver and copper nano-particles. The pages contain instructions in English and the local language; water is poured and filtered through the pages themselves. One page can purify up to a hundred liters (about twenty-five gallons) of water, and one book can supply one person’s drinking water needs for about four years, the researchers said. The researchers currently make the books by hand themselves, but are now looking to ramp up production and send the books to local communities.
Rico says it's nice to see good things coming out of his alma mater...

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