About us...


H2bid.com provides 24/7access to bids and tenders from water and wastewater utilities around the world. H2bid is the world leader in water and wastewater procurement.

List your Products for sale
Customized bid research

For Contractors


H2find.com helps contractors, subcontractors, and suppliers serving the water/wastewater industries find each other.





South African Water Budget Monitoring Education Tool for Utilities

California’s Water – Energy Relationship

Sponsors




International
WaterCentre

Liquid Assets



Jay-Z Speaks...

Water for Life





Latest Water Bids





Free TopSite


Could Nanotechnology Solve The Water Crisis?

Nanotechnology could be the answer to ensuring a safe supply of drinking water for
regions of the world stricken by periodic drought or where water contamination is
rife. Writing in the International Journal of Nuclear Desalination, researchers in India
explain how carbon nanotubes could replace conventional materials in water-purification systems.



Water shortages and lack of access to safe drinking water will continue to grow
as major global problems. At present, more than one billion people lack access to
safe drinking water and 2.4 billion people lack access to proper sanitation, nearly
all of them in the developing countries. At present a third of the world’s population
live in water-stressed countries, and by 2025, this is expected to rise to two-thirds.



S. Kar, R.C. Bindal, S. Prabhakar, P.K. Tewari, K. Dasgupta, and D. Sathiyamoorthy
of the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) in Mumbai, India, explain how new
water purification technologies are constantly being investigated but to be viable
in the developing world these have to be relatively simple and inexpensive to install,
operate, and maintain.

They have turned to nanostructured, the carbon nanotubes, hollow carbon fibers
less than a billionth the thickness of a human hair. The unique chemical properties
of carbon nanotubes mean that only very small molecules, such as water molecules
can pass along their interiors, whereas viruses, bacteria, toxic metal ions, and large
noxious organic molecules cannot.

The team points out that the smooth and water repellant interior of carbon
nanotubes means that a filter based on this technology would be very efficient,
allowing a high flow rate of water through the filter without fouling. Importantly,
the power needed to drive water through such a system will be low compared to
conventional membrane technology.

However, to be useful as a nanotech filtration system for contaminated water,
these nanoscale structures need to be engineered to form well-defined
arrangements to allow the efficient decontamination of water. The team has now
investigated the potential of forming water filtration systems based on carbon
nanotubes that could remove arsenic, fluoride, heavy metals and toxic organic
chemicals. Carbon nanotubes have impressive credentials for water purification,
the researchers say.

SOURCE: Inderscience Publishers

Popularity: 4% [?]

Print This Page Print This Page Email This Page Email This Page

Water Calculator


Water Footprint Calculator


Water Science for Schools


Kids Fun Games


H2bid Guestbook




Subscribe

Add to Google Reader or Homepage

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Add to My AOL


Categories

Search

Archives

Meta

Water News


Aldermen approve water, sewer rate hikes - Webster Progress Times

American Water's John Young Elected to WateReuse Foundation Board of Directors - MarketWatch (press release)

City strikes water and sewer deal - Fox 59

Council hesitant to raise water, wastewater rates - Chino Valley Review

City of Thousand Oaks Teams With California American Water and United States ... - PR Newswire (press release)

American Water Works Company Inc reports appointment of John Young to ... - Trading Markets (press release)

Market Report on Water and Wastewater Management in the Asia Pacific - AZoCleantech

Miltonvale Park to upgrade Sleepy Hollow water/sewer system - Charlottetown, The Guardian

Parker City recipient of $40000 plan grant - Muncie Star Press

Middlesex Water Company Reports 2009 Financial Results - CNNMoney.com (press release)

© 2010 H2bidblog.com