Treehugger.com | August, 5th 2010 | Most portable water filters use
carbon filters, special membranes with microscopic openings, or
chemicals like chlorine or iodine to clean the water and make it save
for drinking. However, one of the best systems for purifying water is
actually with ultraviolet light.

But how do you get an ultraviolet light purification system into a
small portable water bottle that can be used anywhere? One design and
technology graduate has figured it out, and already won the UK branch
of the prestigious James Dyson Award for his invention.

According to BBC, Timothy Whitehead, a graduate from Loughborough
University, came up with the idea for the bottle while travelling in
Zambia. Rather than using chlorine or iodine tabs which take half an
hour to work and leave a gross taste in the water, this new bottle
first filters particles four microns or larger from the water, then
uses ultraviolet light (powered by wind-up) to kill 99.9% of bacteria
and viruses. All within two minutes and all without altering the taste.

The Pure bottle is already quite advanced in the development process,
including an "original filter designed which filters any soiled water
down to 4 micron in particle size (fully scientifically proven); a
wind-up Ultra violet light system has been produced, including a custom
designed PCB to monitor winding frequency and to give user feedback
when the water is sterile. The casing has been designed for both
prototype production and manufacture."



Now that the invention has proven itself in the UK, it will face off
with other finalists from around the world in October.

www.AstroDigi.com (Nino Guevara Ruwano)

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Posted By NINO to en.ASTRODIGI.com at 8/08/2010 08:06:00 AM

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