Greetings Charlie and  Bruce, 
That is a  great move forward you have both made in the field detection of the 
key bacteriologic contaminants in drinking water .  I hope that the grand 
finale of your efforts would be to identify local materials resources  that can 
be adapted to your tests, so that it can become a fully locally owned process: 
Charlie, you seem closer to that goal in using sari cloth but what about 
indicators in the surrounding plant & animal community ; What in  that 
environment indicates the presence of  ecoli and how can it be calibrated to 
your analytical assessment.  

(As an example of what i am suggesting, towards the end of our 5 year contract 
with the Swedish aid in Tanzania in the late 70's, we used dead cow bones 
crushed and heated to actively exchange the  flouride ion from otherwise 
unpotable flouride rich drinking water that flowed ot of contact springs all 
around the side to the proximate Mt Meru.   (This idea was developed by a 
nameless Arizona rancher that if the water was turning his ranch hands' teeth 
brown and making their children bowlegged, then  why not feed the water thru 
said cow bones first. He allegedly heated the bones to make them more brittle 
and make them more attractive for the simle ion exchange required,  then 
smashed them into crumbs with a small sledge hammer and dumped  them into an 1 
gal coffee tin and dripped the flouride water through it. the resulting water 
was relatively free of flouride , the crushed bones turned brown indicating 
definate exchange of ions, taking place . He would then dump out the  bones 
when they "turned brown" refilling the tin with a new batch and so on. The 
"when it turns brown" was is the interesting part.  I had planned to  calibrate 
 what "turning brown" meant with my trusty hatch kit to get some idea of what 
that indicated for testing purposes but never got the chance to do so. The 
users on Mt meet simply went by color indicators but thus a solution was born.  

For us at least,  all about local ownership of the process when and where 
possible right down to the ground and the resources they have available again 
where possible.. Just wondering if it might be possible to push the envelope a 
bit farther to better assure complete local adaptation. 
Either way it was good  to learn that someone is moving in the right direction. 
Keep up the good work !
  
Richard Stanley
www.legacyfound.org


On Feb 10, 2013, at 11:30 PM, Charlie Sellers wrote:

Thank you for that great reference on improved investigations into this simple 
approach!  We looked into the use of sari cloth filtration when we explored 
methods to use when constructing slow sand filters for an EWB project, where we 
needed to effectively sieve the media so that it had the right particle size 
distribution.  The information we had available to us concerned just mechanical 
filtration aspects:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/27/health/27sari.html?_r=0
and as a materials scientist I especially liked their electron microscope 
images, showing the differences between new and used sari materials (showing 
openings on the order of ~20 microns):
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC298724/?tool=pmcentrez

But the bottom line is that locally available materials/methods worked for them 
in Bangladesh, and now the addition of heating the water afterwards can lead to 
even further improvements in the approach's efficacy.





From: nari phaltan <[email protected]>
To: Discussion of biomass cooking stoves <[email protected]> 
Sent: Friday, February 8, 2013 4:20 PM
Subject: [Stoves] A simple water sterilization technique

Hello stovers,

One of the major problems of rural areas is unavailability of clean drinking 
water. A simple method of filtration and heating it to 55-60 degrees Celsius 
can remove all bacteria. The paper is at; 
http://www.currentscience.ac.in/php/forthcoming/RC494.pdf

And the news item is at; 
http://www.firstpost.com/fwire/sari-sun-combo-can-sterilise-dirty-water-619304.html?utm_source=fwire&utm_medium=hp

Cheers.

Anil



-- 
Nimbkar Agricultural Research Institute (NARI)
Tambmal, Phaltan-Lonand Road
P.O.Box 44
Phaltan-415523, Maharashtra, India
Ph:91-2166-222396/220945
e-mail:[email protected]
          [email protected]

http://www.nariphaltan.org


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