Researchers develop 3D printed filter for ‘forever chemicals’ in water
Researchers develop 3D printed filter for ‘forever chemicals’ in water
It is possible they don’t trust this to be food grade yet, or maybe it traps a lot of forever chemicals but it erodes microplastics as it filters. It also sounds like you need a fairly special material to print it, not just your average plastics.
Something people can do to treat their water for some forever chemicals is using activated carbon filters. There are several types available from different residential water treatment companies.
I went back through 6 months of my comment history to find out the post has been removed… By memory a study found a ton of microplastics in bottled water, most were polyamide nanoplastics which was not found in the plastic of the bottle itself. It seemed the only part of the process that was made of polyamide was the RO membrane
'Scuse me neighbor, can I borrow a spool of indium oxide filament?
"In three hours, the monoliths removed 53 per cent of perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), one of the most common forever chemicals also called PFAS.
Moreover, by heating the monoliths at 500°C and reusing them three times, researchers observed that at least 75 per cent of PFOA was removed."
So yeah, like 9+ hour process. Gotta cool them down between each run. I looked on wikipedia, Indium is about $167/ Kg. What if, I know this is crazy, what if we stopped poisoning the planet, and ourselves?
What if, I know this is crazy, what if we stopped poisoning the planet, and ourselves?
I’m intrigued! How would we make a profit doing this?
Even if we could stop poisoning the planet tomorrow, we still need to figure out how to deal with the mess we’ve created so far. The important distinction is to not let this technology development be used as a smokescreen for industries that produce PFAS, as has been done with carbon capture for the fossil fuel industry.
Perhaps the average Jane won’t be making one of these filters at home, but they could perhaps be utilized in water treatment facilities to help stem forever chemical contamination in municipal water supplies. Better yet, make DuPont pay for these systems via an industry tax or punitive damages for their negligence when promoting the materials and downplaying their risks to human health. (and the environment)