On 16-Nov-10 10:48 AM, Udhay Shankar N wrote:

>>> http://www.engadget.com/2005/08/18/lifestraw-purifies-water-instantly-for-under-2-a-year/
>>>
>>> LifeStraw purifies water instantly for under $2 a year
>>
>> More on this theme, with another interesting concept here: a solar-powered
>> water bottle that purifies up to a gallon of water at a time.
>>
>> http://www.indexaward.dk/2007/default.asp?id=706&show=nomination&nominationid=56
> 
> Another take on this idea:
> 
> http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/03/dining/03bottle.html

Some more on this theme:

http://www.physorg.com/news/2011-02-nano-solution-global-problem-nanomembranes-filter.html

A nano-Solution to global water problem: Nanomembranes could filter bacteria
February 21, 2011

(PhysOrg.com) -- New nanomaterials research from the University at
Buffalo could lead to new solutions for an age-old public health
problem: how to separate bacteria from drinking water.

To the naked eye, both water molecules and germs are invisible --
objects so tiny they are measured by the nanometer, a unit of length
about 100,000 times thinner than the width of a human hair.

But at the microscopic level, the two actually differ greatly in size. A
single water molecule is less than a nanometer wide, while some of the
most diminutive bacteria are a couple hundred.

Working with a special kind of polymer called a block copolymer, a UB
research team has synthesized a new kind of nanomembrane containing
pores about 55 nanometers in diameter -- large enough for water to slip
through easily, but too small for bacteria.

The pore size is the largest anyone has achieved to date using block
copolymers, which possess special properties that ensure pores will be
evenly spaced, said Javid Rzayev, the UB chemist who led the study. The
findings were published online on Jan. 31 in Nano Letters and will
appear in the journal's print edition later this year, with UB chemistry
graduate student Justin Bolton as lead author.

"These materials present new opportunities for use as filtration
membranes," said Rzayev, an assistant professor of chemistry.
"Commercial membranes have limitations as far as pore density or
uniformity of the pore size. The membranes prepared from block
copolymers have a very dense distribution of pores, and the pores are
uniform."

"There's a lot of research in this area, but what our research team was
able to accomplish is to expand the range of available pores to 50
nanometers in diameter, which was previously unattainable by
block-copolymer-based methods," Rzayev continued. "Making pores bigger
increases the flow of water, which will translate into cost and time
savings. At the same time, 50 to 100 nm diameter pores are small enough
not to allow any bacteria through. So, that is a sweet spot for this
kind of application."

The new nanomembrane owes its special qualities to the polymers that
scientists used to create it. Block copolymers are made up of two
polymers that repel one another but are "stitched" together at one end
to form the single copolymer.

When many block copolymers are mixed together, their mutual repulsion
leads them to assemble in a regular, alternating pattern. The result of
that process, called self-assembly, is a solid nanomembrane comprising
two different kinds of polymers.

To create evenly spaced pores in the material, Rzayev and colleagues
simply removed one of the polymers. The pores' relatively large size was
due to the unique architecture of the original block copolymers, which
were made from bottle-brush molecules that resemble round hair brushes,
with molecular "bristles" protruding all the way around a molecular
backbone.

Provided by University at Buffalo
-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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