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India: Nano Filter
for Clean Water
An affordable, compact water purifier launched in India in December 2009 could
save millions of lives from waterborne diseases. Just two feet tall, the Tata
Swach ('swach' is Hindi for 'clean') is being marketed as the 'water purifier
for the masses' by India's Tata Group. Each filter consists of a 19-litre
plastic box and has a lifespan of 3,000 litres, which can supply enough drinking
water for a family of five for a year. The filter does not require running
water, electricity or boiling. It uses rice husk ash, a by-product of the rice
industry, as a framework on which silver nanoparticles that kill bacteria are
mounted. Paddy husk ash is used for cleaning teeth and India produces around 20
million tonnes of it annually. Tata Chemicals will initially produce one million
filters a year with the aim of scaling up production to three million within the
next five years. It also hopes to export the filter to Africa.
Source: SciDev.Net,
December 2009 |