Category Archives: Water quality

Battling cholera with NFC RFID-tracked drinking water in Haiti

Deep Springs International (DSI), a non-profit organization based in Pennsylvania, USA, and Nokia Research Center (NRC), Palo Alto, California, are teaming up to ensure the supply of clean drinking water in Haiti with NFC (near field communication) technology.

DSI has been delivering water treatment systems (which essentially consist of a covered 19-liter bucket with a spigot at the bottom) and a locally manufactured chlorine solution it has labeled Gadyen Dlo (Creole for "water guardian") since 2007.. Photo: Michael Ritter, DSI

Water treatment kits are being provided to track chlorine levels in household drinking water using NFC-enabled cell phones. NRC provided the health workers with approximately 50 Nokia 6212 NFC-enabled phones while UPM RFID supplied UPM BullsEye™ NFC tags with NXP Mifare Ultralight chip. Joseph “Jofish” Kaye, Senior Research Scientist, NRC, initiated the project together with David Holstius, a student and Ph.D. candidate at the University of California, Berkeley’s School of Public Health, who developed the software application for mobile phones.

Families in the most rural areas in Haiti will have one water treatment kit consisting of a five-gallon (19 litre) plastic bucket with a lid and spigot. The RFID (radio-frequency identification) tags are attached to buckets for storing the treated drinking water and delivered to families together with a chlorine solution and written instructions for using the kit. When DSI’s water technicians visit their homes, they check whether they are using the kits properly and provide additional chlorine solutions. The technicians will read the tags using NFC cell phones loaded with software guiding them to ask relevant questions about the water being tested. They then send the data to DSI’s headquarters via SMS. The software application uses the Frontline SMS platform.

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Low-cost filter: using nanotechnology to kill bacteria

Stanford University is testing an inexpensive water filter, suitable for developing countries, that removes bacteria quickly and without clogging. The filter uses a piece of cotton treated with nanomaterial inks, that kills bacteria with electrical fields but uses just 20 percent of the power required by pressure-driven filters.

The Stanford filter, which is driven by gravity, has pores large enough to allow for a high flow rate–about 100,000 liters per hour. It uses electrical pulses to inactivate bacteria by poking holes in their cell walls. The research was led by Stanford materials science and engineering professors Yi Cui and Sarah Heilshorn.

To make the filter, researchers dip a piece of cotton batting in a water-based carbon-nanotube ink, let it dry, then dip it in an alcohol-based silver-nanowire ink and let it dry again. Cui and others have used similar dipping methods to make paper-nanotube battery electrodes and nanotube textiles. The long, narrow nanotubes and nanowires get enmeshed in the fibers.

Speedy sterilization: A Stanford researcher pours water through a funnel fitted with a cotton-nanotube filter that rapidly kills bacteria. The red cords supply electricity to the device, which uses electrical fields to poke holes in the bacteria. Photo: Technology Review

In preliminary tests, described online in the journal Nano Letters, the filter inactivated about 98 percent of E. coli bacteria.

In the tests, a wire, connected to an electrical power source, which could be car batteries or solar panels, is immersed in the water filter. The researchers think that the strong local electrical fields,  which are formed at the tip of the silver nanowires, piercing the cell walls. When the electricity is off, the silver (which has antimicrobial properties) prevents bacteria from fouling the surface, a common problem with filters.

There have been no definitive studies of the effects of water-borne carbon nanotubes and silver nanowires on people and lower organisms; experiments with airborne carbon nanotubes have shown that their effect on mice lungs is similar to the effect of asbestos. But early tests on thousands of gallons of water suggest that the nanomaterials are not leaching into the water. The researchers will perform further tests to determine whether the nanomaterials remain enmeshed in the filter or are dislodged into the water over time.

The next step required is to improve the filter’s efficacy and show that it can work with a broad range of water-borne pathogens, including viruses and protozoa.

Watch the related video “Making a Nano-Water Filter for the Developing World”

Source: Katherine Bourzac, Technology Review, 08 Sep 2010

Arsenic: new testing kits wins prize

A group of environmental scientists have won the 2010 Erwin Schrödinger Prize for the development of a simple, inexpensive test which measures arsenic levels in drinking water.

The portable and highly reliable arsenic testing procedure was developed over a number of years. Commercial production of the simple, quick and cost-effective kit – trademarked ARSOlux® – will commence from 2011, starting in Bangladesh.

Field measurements in Bangladesh

Field measurements in Haziganj / Chandpur District, Bangladesh. Photo: Carola Endes/UFZ

In 2009, Dr Mona Wells, a Senior Environmental Scientist with multidisciplinary consultancy CPG in Dunedin, New Zealand, Professor Dr Hauke Harms of the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research in Germany and Professor Dr Jan Roelof van der Meer of the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, published a 20-year retrospective study on the Exxon Valdez disaster, which incorporated the same technology as their new arsenic test.

 

ARSOlux® indicates arsenic levels in water reliably within just two hours (incubation period). It uses bacteria as so-called “bioreporters”.

Through genetic engineering, bacteria strains are enhanced with “reporter genes” that cause the cells to glow when exposed to arsenic. [...] The genetically modified bacteria are freeze-dried and stored in test tubes until they are needed. For the actual test, the test tube is filled with water and inserted into a small device that measures how much light is emitted by the bacteria. This luminescence is a measure for the arsenic concentration in the water sample. Using mathematical methods, Dr Mona Wells [...] managed to improve the reliability and precision of the test to the point that it is actually more accurate than simple chemical analyses.

At only about $1.50 per test, the ARSOlux® method is significantly less expensive than chemical lab tests, and experts say that it also delivers more conclusive results. Unlike a purely chemical analysis, the bioreporter bacteria show to what extent living organisms would absorb certain chemicals, allowing statements to be made in respect to bioavailability and the health risk posed by substances present in water.

Over the past few years, scientists have tested the method in campaigns carried out in Vietnam and Bangladesh, and have shown that the ARSOlux® test also delivers reliable results under real-life conditions. With financial support from the Helmholtz Enterprise Fund (HEF), the scientists have developed the patented method to the point that it is ready to be marketed and plan to found a company that will manufacture and sell the measuring devices and test kits beginning in 2011. The devices could initially be employed in mobile clinics that drive from village to village in Bangladesh. Other potential customers would be international aid organisations, which could use the test prior to drilling wells to determine if the well would supply safe drinking water.

Laboratory measurements and training of staff and students in the CETASD - Centre for Environmental Technology and Sustainable Development in Hanoi, Vietnam. Photo: Prof. Hauke Harms/UFZ

The team were presented with the Schrodinger Prize, which includes 50,000 Euros (approximately $90,000), at an award ceremony in Germany on 16 September 2010.

The Schrödinger Prize is awarded annually by the Helmholtz Association, a group of German research centres of excellence in applied science. The prize recognises contributions to interdisciplinary science, in particular work which has the potential to affect the most people in the most profound way.

Source: Scoop, 10 Sep 2010 ; UFZ, 26 Aug 2010

Extremely affordable gravity-powered water filters

A question: if we can fly to the moon, can we make a 1$ water filter for people to use in their homes? And, if the answer is yes, why haven’t we yet? This is one of my favourite things: the quest for extremely affordable point-of-use water filters.

There are some hopeful developments. After Hindustan Unilever had introduced their Pureit water purifier at a price level of 30$ for a very well-designed and effective water filter, protected by 21 patents and using 5 water filtration steps, Tata Company recently introduced their Tata Swach water purifier, at 20$, with 1 filtration step, but equaly good-looking. And we already had the Vestergaard Live Straw Family filter, also at 20$. In the open source hardware corner, we have the biosand filters, and ceramic pot filters. Lots of good stuff.

These filters all use some combination of microfiltration, disinfection and adsorbtion. Microfiltration simply blocks bacteria from passing through the filter by using a highly porous material in which the bacteria bacially get lost. Disinfection, for example using chlorine, kills bacteria and other pathogens using chemical means. Adsorbtion, finally, uses carbon to adsorb molucules, improving taste, smell, and colour of the water. Not all filters use all three, and this is where the main differences in quality lie.

diagram.png
How a siphon filter works

The Siphon filter
So — 30$, 20$, can we go lower? Enter the siphon filter. Produced by Basic Water Needs Foundation India, and sold under the brand name Tulip filter and CrystalPur, it is sold for 10$. To reach that price point, the filter has been designed in such a way that only the most essential elements remain: a filter element, a tube, a tap. That’s it.

The ceramic filter element is made out of diatomaceous earth, a wonderful substance consisting of the fossilized remains of diatoms, a type of hard-shelled algea. Their beautifull little skelletons contain extremely small holes, which are very suitable to act as a bacterial filter. The filters are impregnated with silver particles, which reduce regrowth of bacteria. Allhough bacteria are filtered effectively, candle-type ceramic filters have lower removal efficiency for viruses. To effectively remove these, ceramic filter filtration needs to be combined with a disinfectant such as chlorine.

Siphon3.png
Siphon filter demonstration in Mozambique

Why it is smart
The brilliance of the filter lies in the tube. Because a ceramic filter is highly porous, it needs a certain amount of water pressure to push the water through. In the Siphon filter, the tube is used to siphon the water from a higher water container to a lower one, creating about 70cm of water pressure. This is enough to suck the water through the filter, creating a flow rate of about 5 liters per hour. Plenty.

The filter is cleaned by closing the tap and squeezing the rubber bulb, which pushes clean water back through the filter, which cleans it. Called ‘backwashing’, this significantly prolongs the lifetime of the filter. It’s small size makes it easy for small hardware and general stores to keep it in stock, and to distribute it on a large scale for emergency situations. The costs are kept low as storage pots for the water are not included: the filter can be used with storage pots that people already have.

At the moment, the filter is being implemented by EnterpriseWorks/VITA, and Connect International in Cambodia, Tanzania, Mozambique, Madagascar, Kenya, India, and other countries. Good luck people!

Author: Mark Tiele Westra, Editor Akvopedia.

Links:

Arsenic: when will the clean water start flowing?

Many new technologies have promised to remove arsenic from drinking water but little has changed on the ground, finds T. V. Padma.

Razia Begum’s family, like many thousands of others in Bangladesh, was given an ‘alcan’ filter — a simple unit containing activated alumina that absorbs arsenic from water — under a UN project in 2006. Two years later, the filter stopped working as it became clogged up and needed specialist attention that was no longer available.

Straightforward solutions to the arsenic problem that affects hundreds of millions of people have, so far, been hard to come by.

“I am not aware of any research that has led to a widespread application for providing arsenic-safe water to people in the affected areas,” says Mohammad Yunus, senior scientist at the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, which is based in Dhaka and works in Nagda and neighbouring villages.

This is despite the fact that scientists have made great progress in understanding how, where and why arsenic ends up in soil and water, and have designed promising tests and filters. But for such inventions to survive, they must overcome basic, yet hard-to-resolve issues that lie far beyond the laboratories.

Several mitigation options — filters, sinking deep tube-wells, rainwater harvesting and purifying surface water by simple filtration — have been tried but they have had limited success, says Yunus.

Techniques that attempt to remove arsenic rely on a few basic principles: adding oxygen to ‘free’ arsenic from water; adding aluminium or iron salts to precipitate a solid salt that can then be filtered out; or passing water through a membrane that allows certain chemicals through according to their concentration.

Mixed results

The last two options — filters and membranes — currently have technical limitations, says Bhaskar Sengupta, a civil engineer at Queen’s University, Northern Ireland.

An arsenic mitigation project that ran from 2006–07 by UNICEF and the Bangladesh Department of Public Health Engineering supplied filters suitable for household and community use at 10–20 per cent of the actual cost.

In 2009, an assessment of the project found that 70–80 per cent of households were using the filters but 5–15 per cent of the filtered water nevertheless contained arsenic at more than 50 micrograms per litre — above recommended levels. The study concluded that the filters could be useful as one tool in an array of options for arsenic-safe water — but only if deployed and explained properly to local people, not an easy process with a poor and often illiterate population.

And the project did not factor in maintenance and refills, or building local technical capacity, points out Yunus.

Membranes don’t clog up but have their own problems. They produce two streams — one of pure water that is stripped of not just arsenic but every other mineral, many needed by the body; the other the arsenic-rich waste stream which needs safe disposal.

The WHO agrees with Yunus that there are no proven technologies for the removal of arsenic at water collection points such as pumps, tube wells and springs.

Even measuring arsenic levels is far from simple. The WHO notes that it needs sophisticated, expensive laboratory techniques as well as trained staff. Field test kits for detecting the low arsenic concentrations of concern for human health are unreliable.

Oxygen gets publicity

Scientists are hopeful that recent work will prove more successful. There is excitement now about a chemical-free method to remove arsenic from ground water, developed by a team of European and Indian scientists under a project funded by the European Union (see Indian arsenic clean-up ‘working well’) [doi:10.1016/j.envpol.2009.09.014].

The method involves pumping air into aquifers. The oxygen frees the arsenic, and water with most of the arsenic removed is pumped into storage tanks and piped to households, says Sengupta, leader of the research team.

The technique cuts arsenic levels of as high as 70 micrograms per litre to just two micrograms, well within the WHO guideline of ten micrograms per litre, as well as killing most diarrhoea-causing bacteria.

Six plants are now operating in West Bengal state in India, after they were set up with aid from a two year World Bank project that ended in 2008. And on 28 October 2009, the Blacksmith Institute in the United States rated it among ten recent ‘revolutionary’ technologies.

Sengupta says setting up a treatment plant costs about US$2,200 and most of the parts can be bought and installed locally.

Nanontechology — and other advances

Elsewhere, scientists are examining the potential of nanotechnology. In May 2009, researchers at the US-based Rice University reported field tests in Mexico of ‘nanorust’ — tiny particles of iron oxide less than a billionth of a metre in size — that remove arsenic from water.

The team plans to coat the sand in sand filters with nanorust and run water through them to remove both arsenic and diarrhoea-causing viruses.

Meanwhile, an intriguing discovery in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna delta of Bangladesh and India offers yet another potential solution. Geologists from Dhaka University in Bangladesh and from the United States found that levels of arsenic are higher in deeper sediments in the river delta than in surface sediments.

Reporting their findings in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (5 September 2009), they say complex chemical reactions in the soil cause the arsenic to stick to iron particles in the sediments. This forms an impenetrable ‘iron curtain’ or barrier that prevents arsenic from being discharged into the ocean.

Yan Zheng, of Queens College, City University of New York, United States, says it might be possible to engineer a natural reactive barrier in a well , which needs to be just deep enough to intercept the water table, typically 7–8 metres. The resulting, arsenic-free water could be pumped away for irrigation, he says.

“There is very little maintenance as the barrier will operate for decades if not longer. It will be very cost effective because holes are dug all the time,” says Zheng.

As for a better test for arsenic , scientists at the US-based University of Massachusetts reported in April 2009 “the first accurate test for arsenic compounds in soil”.

The researchers first extracted arsenic compounds by adding an acid and an alkali to the water. They next separated the mixture by running it along a column where different substances in the mixture percolate down at different rates depending on how heavy or light they are. An electric arc is passed through the samples and the substances are measured by the intensity of light they emit.

Bridging the ‘know–do’ gap

But will these exciting results ever become a workable solution for Razia?

Yunus says that translating arsenic research into practice depends on multiple factors, many of which are absent in affected countries. These include political commitment and priorities; planning processes; commitment by international donors such as UNICEF and the WHO to support projects; and the availability of multidisciplinary teams comprising public health experts and clinicians, engineers, hydrologists, geologists, social and behavioural scientists and communication experts.

“There is sufficient information about the various mitigation options to provide arsenic-safe water to people in affected areas. The missing link is the ‘know–do’ gap,” says Yunus. “Bridging this gap should now be the priority for action.”

The scientists’ role ends with publishing research findings, says Sengupta. He agrees that demonstrating feasibility on the ground usually requires the intervention of donor agencies, after which it is up to national and local governments to prioritise a technology.

Of the Queen’s University invention, for example, where oxygen is pumped into aquifers, Sengupta says India’s Rajiv Gandhi National Drinking Water Mission, which aims to provide safe drinking water to rural areas, is happy to adopt the technology. But the supply of drinking water is a ‘state’ subject in federal India, meaning it is up to each state government to take the final decision. And so the ball now lies in the court of the West Bengal government, which is yet to back the technology.

And ultimately, observes Sengupta, the real test lies in whether local people can understand and use a technique.

Source: T. V. Padma, SciDev.net, 24 Nov 2009

Roof-harvested rainwater for potable purposes : application of solar collector disinfection (SOCO-DIS)

Amin, M.T. and Han, M.Y. (2009). Roof-harvested rainwater for potable purposes : application of solar collector disinfection (SOCO-DIS). Water research ; vol. 43, no. 20 ; p. 5225-5235. DOI: doi:10.1016/j.watres.2009.08.041

Abstract

The efficiency of solar disinfection (SODIS), recommended by the World Health Organization, has been determined for rainwater disinfection, and potential benefits and limitations discussed. The limitations of SODIS have now been overcome by the use of solar collector disinfection (SOCO-DIS), for potential use of rainwater as a small-scale potable water supply, especially in developing countries. Rainwater samples collected from the underground storage tanks of a rooftop rainwater harvesting (RWH) system were exposed to different conditions of sunlight radiation in 2-L polyethylene terephthalate bottles in a solar collector with rectangular base and reflective open wings. Total and fecal coliforms were used, together with Escherichia coli and heterotrophic plate counts, as basic microbial and indicator organisms of water quality for disinfection efficiency evaluation. In the SOCO-DIS system, disinfection improved by 20–30% compared with the SODIS system, and rainwater was fully disinfected even under moderate weather conditions, due to the effects of concentrated sunlight radiation and the synergistic effects of thermal and optical inactivation. The SOCO-DIS system was optimized based on the collector configuration and the reflective base: an inclined position led to an increased disinfection efficiency of 10–15%. Microbial inactivation increased by 10–20% simply by reducing the initial pH value of the rainwater to 5. High turbidities also affected the SOCO-DIS system; the disinfection efficiency decreased by 10–15%, which indicated that rainwater needed to be filtered before treatment. The problem of microbial regrowth was significantly reduced in the SOCO-DIS system compared with the SODIS system because of residual sunlight effects. Only total coliform regrowth was detected at higher turbidities. The SOCO-DIS system was ineffective only under poor weather conditions, when longer exposure times or other practical means of reducing the pH were required for the treatment of stored rainwater for potable purposes.

Article Outline

1. Introduction
2. Materials and methods

2.1. SODIS and SOCO-DIS systems
2.2. Microbial analysis

3. Results and discussions

3.1. Sampling site and characteristics
3.2. Characteristics of different weather conditions
3.3. The effects of the collector’s base angle and different backing surfaces in the SOCO-DIS system
3.4. Comparison of the SODIS and SOCO-DIS systems

3.4.1. The effects of radiation and temperature effects on microbial inactivation
3.4.2. The effects of initial pH values on disinfection efficiency
3.4.3. The effects of initial turbidity values on disinfection efficiency
3.4.4. Microbial regrowth in SOCO-DIS system and comparison with SODIS

4. Conclusions
Acknowledgements
References

Contact:

  • Assistant Professor, Department of Environmental Sciences, COMSATS Institute of Information Technology, Abbottabad, 22060, Pakistan, e-mail: muhammadamin [at] ciit.net.pk
  • bProfessor, Civil and Environmental Engineering Department, Seoul National University, Shinrimdong, Kwanak Gu, Seoul, 151-742, Republic of Korea, e-mail: myhan [at] snu.ac.kr

WaterAid water source options poster

WaterAid has produced a new poster resource that rates different water supply technology options in relation to their relative capital cost, operational cost, water quantity supplied and water quality supplied.

The poster also provides information on the situations in which certain water supply technologies are most applicable.

Levels of appropriateness are colour coded based on different combinations of the above variables.

The resource can be printed as a poster on A4, A3 or A2. You can download it here:

Water source options – a comparison ( PDF 93KB)
WaterAid-Techposter

Scientists “listen” to plants to find water pollution

Scientists in Israel have discovered a new way to test for water pollution by “listening” to what the plants growing in water have to say. By shining a laser beam on the tiny pieces of algae floating in the water, the researchers said they hear sound waves that tell them the type and amount of contamination in the water. “It is a red light, telling us that something is beginning to go wrong with the quality of water,” said Zvy Dubinsky, an aquatic biologist at Israel’s Bar Ilan University. “Algae is the first thing to be affected by a change in water quality.”

[Testing algae photosynthesis] could be used to monitor water quality faster, more cheaply and more accurately than techniques now in use, Dubinsky said. [...] With proper funding, Dubinsky said a commercial product could be ready in about two years.

Related journal article: Pinchasov, Y. … [et al.] (2007). Photoacoustics : a novel tool for the determination of photosynthetic energy storage efficiency in phytoplankton. Hydrobiologia ; vol. 579, no. 1 : p. 251-256. doi:10.1007/s10750-006-0408-5

Source: Ari Rabinovitch, Reuters,14 Aug 2008

Solar pasteurisation: Kenyan project uses solar cookers to provide safe water

In November 2007, Solar Cookers International (SCI) began a two-year pilot project to increase water quality awareness and introduce [and train local staff to use] the Safe Water Package and the Portable Microbiology Laboratory to communities in western Kenya. The effort is led by SCI founder and board member Dr. Bob Metcalf, professor of Biological Sciences at California State University, Sacramento.

[...]

When used in conjunction with SCI’s Water Pasteurization Indicator (WAPI), simple solar cookers can safely

Solar CooKit

Solar CooKit

pasteurize drinking water and reduce incidence of waterborne diseases, while saving precious cooking fuel. The Safe Water Package (SWP) that families will receive provides all the necessary tools: a CooKit solar cooker, a black pot, a WAPI, and a water storage container.

[...]

[The project also distributes] the Portable Microbiology Laboratory (PML), a gallon-sized kit with materials for 25 water tests. Each PML contains Colilert® and PetrifilmTM tests for Escherichia coli contamination, sterile plastic pipettes, collection bags, and a battery-operated UV lamp for reading Colilert® tests.

See the slide-show on Water testing & Pasteurization in Africa.

Read more

Scientists develop tool for quick analysis of water purity

Sydney: Researchers have developed a tool that analyses water purity within minutes, against the 20 to 48 hours required by existing methods.

The tool will boost “water safety and reduce health risk from use of contaminated water in the developing world”, said David Garman, executive director of Environmental Biotechnology Cooperative Research Centre (EBCRC) at the World Water Congress in Vienna.

“Our technology mimics the human body’s ability to detect pathogens. By using antibodies in combination with nano and micro particles, we can easily identify pathogens in an environmental sample,” said Garman.

“By providing highly specific results in the field, the system will enhance the early detection and management of disease outbreaks and contamination. Other systems similar to ours require complex lab equipment or high temperatures, which are just not viable in remote field operations,” he said.

The user friendly system will feed results directly into to portable devices via simple electronic readouts, laptops and PDAs. It will detect a broad range of water borne contaminants like faecal coliforms and E. coli, among others. The system is also adaptable to food and environmental applications.

Methods currently in use to identify waterborne microbes are either sensitive but slow, requiring up to three days for a result, or relatively fast but insensitive when used with diluted samples.

Source: IANS / India edunews.net, 10 Sep 2008 ; EBCRC, 09 Sep 2008