HOME >> BIOLOGY >> NEWS
UNC-CH experiments reveal new 'pen' can disinfect water

During disasters, civilian or military conflicts and wilderness recreation, disinfecting drinking, cooking and washing-up water can make the difference between getting sick and staying well, but chemical disinfectants such as chlorine and fuels to boil water often are unavailable in the field.

To help solve that problem, researchers have developed a battery-powered disinfecting "pen." The device electrochemically generates mixed oxidants from a salt solution that individuals can use to purify drinking water.

Tests of the invention recently took place at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Environmental Health Microbiology Laboratories. Dr. Mark D. Sobsey, professor of environmental sciences and engineering at the UNC-CH School of Public Health, led the effort with doctoral students Maren E. Anderson and Julie A. Kase.

Los Alamos Technical Associates and MIOX Corp. of Albuquerque developed the pen, and the latter funded the UNC-CH research. Results of the independent analysis are being presented at a news conference at the 100th annual general meeting of the American Society for Microbiology in Los Angeles Wednesday (May 24).

Investigators evaluated the new battery-powered tool to see how well it inactivated waterborne parasites, viruses and bacteria. Several alternative pen cell designs also were tested by seeding oxidant solutions generated from the pen with test microbes, including highly chlorine-resistant Cryptosporidium parvum, a major source of contamination in water.

"There was dramatic -- more than 99.99 percent -- reduction of all test bacteria and viruses within one to 10 minutes," Sobsey said. "Considerable inactivation of C. parvum was also achieved within 90 minutes, the amount depending on the design of the pen cell."

Experiments demonstrated that the miniature pen cell electrochemically generated a mixture of oxidants from a salt solution that was able to inactivate C. parvum eggs, as well as bacteria
'"/>

Contact: David Williamson
david_williamson@unc.edu
919-962-8596
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
23-May-2000


Page: 1 2

Related biology news :

1. UNC-CH study indicates special vaccines could prevent insulin-dependent diabetes
2. Feds give $16 million to UNC-CH scientists studying waste site problems
3. UNC-CH study offers new evidence that garlic protects against cancers
4. UNC-CH researchers to study social effects of N.C. hurricane
5. UNC-CH bus brings mobile lab, high-tech science focus to underserved N.C. schools
6. UNC-CH researchers to comb N.C. mountains for iron problem chiefly affecting Scots, Irish
7. UNC-CH biologists identify new order of marine fungi
8. UNC-CH scientists create worlds smallest pieces of ice
9. UNC-CH scientist finds smallest number of genes needed for organisms survival
10. UNC-CH scientist encourages all to watch PBS series on microbes
11. Prestigious new nutrition research center being established at UNC-CH with NIH funding

Post Your Comments:
*Name:
*Comment:
*Email:
TAG: UNC experiments reveal new pen can disinfect water

(Date:5/17/2013)... Why Tibetan antelope can live at elevations of ... research published in Nature Communications , investigators ... evidence that some genetic factors may be associated ... The data in this work will also provide ... biology of other ruminant species. , The Tibetan ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... human-caused climate change may have little impact on ... of recent studies that predict their widespread extinction ... which appear in the journal Global Change ... a creature thought to be doomed: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/gcb.12253/abstract ... especially forest lizards, will be hard hit by ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... LEMONT, Ill. An international team ... internal structure and cell movement inside a living frog ... showcases a new method to advance biological research and ... at Northwestern University and the Karlsruher Institut fr Technologie ... at the U.S. Department of Energy,s Argonne National Laboratory, ...
Breaking Biology News(10 mins):The genome sequence of Tibetan antelope sheds new light on high-altitude adaptation 2Climate change may have little impact on tropical lizards 2New X-ray method shows how frog embryos could help thwart disease 2
(Date:5/17/2013)... , May 17, 2013 ... the most innovative thought leaders of the medical ... Manufacturing East conference and expo, from June 18-20 ...      (Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130517/613829 ) , ... to deliver industry professionals practical presentations and implementable ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... Calif. , May 17, 2013 /PRNewswire-iReach/ -- ... has been reached with Switzerland ... of anti-infective human monoclonal antibody (mAb) products, and ... human mAb products for treatment of infections by ... Staphylococcus aureus , Pseudomonas aeruginosa , ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... (PRWEB) May 17, 2013 The paradigm ... complex biological systems that can help predict the adverse ... Dr. Sergey Stepaniants, Head of Computational Biology at the ... biology tools to ensure high-quality genomics when used as ... be applied to complex data sets to identify key ...
(Date:5/17/2013)... 2013 IAC Industries wants to share with ... laboratory needing to set up and furnish a research lab ... facility within a year’s time. How does a company make ... is temporary? What is efficient and cost-effective? , The ... IAC Industries. The planners at DisperSol determined that the concept ...
Breaking Biology Technology:MedTech Innovate Seminars: New Interactive Learning Forums at 2013 MD&M East 2Aridis Pharmaceuticals Announces Acquisition of Monoclonal Antibody Products and Technologies From Kenta Biotech 2Aridis Pharmaceuticals Announces Acquisition of Monoclonal Antibody Products and Technologies From Kenta Biotech 3New Downloadable Success Story: “How To Outfit a Dynamic Lab in Flux” 2
Cached News: