Spin cycle: The water purifier shown above separates out contaminants using centrifugal force.
Palo Alto Research Center Inc. (PARC)

Computing

Low-Energy Water Filtration

A new membrane-free water-purification system uses small amounts of energy.

  • Monday, May 12, 2008
  • By Lee Bruno

Most water-filtration technologies require a lot of energy to push water through membranes that eventually become fouled and need to be replaced. Both factors make water filtration costly for most applications.

Now researchers at Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) have been able to overcome those challenges by incorporating scientific insights from the physics of toner particle movements into a low-energy water-filtration device that doesn't use membranes.

That's all good news for the looming specter of filtering brackish drinking water that threatens much of the developing world and even some water-stressed areas in developed countries. In the past, however, the economics have been the stumbling block for creating affordable water-treatment systems. The United Nations estimates that over the next eight years, some 900 million people will need a safe supply of drinking water.

PARC researchers call their device the spiral concentrator. It is a spiral-shaped, 50-centimeter-long piece of plastic tubing that's one millimeter in diameter. As water is pumped through one end of the device, particles in the water are pressed up against the walls of the tubing. Particles as small as one micron in size are separated out by centrifugal force and shunted away from the clean water via diverging forks in the spiral concentrator.

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The advantage of this approach is that it doesn't require as much energy as it would to push contaminated water through a membrane. Such membranes are typically built from resin and have many tiny holes perforated in them, ranging in size from a few micrometers to a few nanometers.

The PARC innovation sprang from an earlier contract research project with the U.S. Army. The aim was to design a device to concentrate biohazards like anthrax by concentrating few parts per liter of contaminants so that a sensor could detect their presence.

The PARC researchers have lots of experience with studying the physics of particles. Toner in copy machines is made up of miniature, electron-charged particles. Understanding the physics of how these charged particles move in both air and liquid has been a key area of PARC research. The lessons the researchers learned about particle toner were used for PARC's biological agent detection system and for the water purifier.

The purifier requires a constant flow rate of water so that the movements of the particles conform to predicted patterns. That flow of water can be achieved with a low power pump that can be driven by a panel of solar cells.

However, because the spin concentrator can separate particles no smaller than one micron in size, it can't remove bacteria. Scott Elrod, manager of the hardware systems laboratory at PARC, says that smaller particles could be separated out by adding alum to the water being filtered. Alum is used in water treatment plants to chemically bind small particles to larger ones, which can then be separated out using gravity. In the case of the spin concentrator, centrifugal force will supply the horsepower to remove those congealed particles.

Elrod says that in the next two months, the researchers expect to scale down the device into a parallel stack of spin concentrators that are small enough to be sold commercially. They also plan to test the system with larger volumes of water, to reach the maximum volume of 100 liters per minute filtration rate. Researchers have already done the calculations on paper indicating that the parallel schema and water volume should be able to be handled.

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Guest (deadbeefnyc)

  • 1373 Days Ago
  • 05/12/2008

Centrifugal force?

Seriously? Mr. Lawman, my high school physics teacher, is disgusted.

Reply

mbloore

39 Comments

  • 1373 Days Ago
  • 05/12/2008

Re: Centrifugal force?

sit in a car taking a fast turn and tell me that centrifugal force isn't real.
centrifugal force isn't 'fictitious', it is just mathematically messy.  but we don't care about the math here.

Reply

zifos

11 Comments

  • 1372 Days Ago
  • 05/13/2008

Re: Centrifugal force?

There is no such thing as centrifigul force.  What you are feeling while driving around a corner is centripital force trying to pull you around the corner.  Your bodies own inertia is trying to make you travel in a straight line and you are interpreting this as "centrifigul" force trying to pull you away from the center of rotoation.

Centrifugal force is a made up concept to explain what people feel because it is harder for them to understand inertia.  Its not a problem of mathematical messiness, its a problem of physically not exhisting.

Reply

mbloore

39 Comments

  • 1362 Days Ago
  • 05/23/2008

Re: Centrifugal force?

as the car rounds a curve your body exerts a force against it, equal and opposite to the centripetal force the car exerts on your body.  how does one not exist while the other does?  it is a matter of preferred frames of reference, not some metaphysical "existence".

Reply

gprao

10 Comments

  • 1373 Days Ago
  • 05/12/2008

Solar Water Purifier

A passive portable solar water-purifier is easily constructed by putting together a solar-cell heated metal cover over a tray of water, and cooling the collected vapors. Works for the common man!

Reply

Monsterboy

92 Comments

  • 1373 Days Ago
  • 05/12/2008

Re: Solar Water Purifier

But how well does that scale up? Since it has to do with surface area, I suspect not well. (But then I'm not an engineer so Idunno.)

Reply

camdaddy09

38 Comments

  • 1373 Days Ago
  • 05/12/2008

Re: Solar Water Purifier

i bet you couldnt get the 100 liters per minute though using that system could you? yea so be quiet

Reply

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johnalphonse

78 Comments

  • 1373 Days Ago
  • 05/12/2008

Just add UV

Nothing written here about the use of UV filtration to eliminate bacteria?  The power to run a UV light bulb isn't overly substantial and would consume less than high-temp heating, albeit all these require some outside energy input.

Reply

Monsterboy

92 Comments

  • 1373 Days Ago
  • 05/12/2008

Re: Just add UV

Even heat would it. Raise it to 160 F for an hour, and that should kill most anything. Maybe that's more energy than they want to deal with, but I'd be mildly surprised if there isn't enough waste solar to do it, especially in tropical locales.

Reply

MakeSense

99 Comments

  • 1372 Days Ago
  • 05/13/2008

Re: Just add UV

Microbes respond to specific levels of UV. A small amount won't get the job done at the flow rates they expect. But it also takes money and energy to supply alum. I'm not sure if alum can be reconditioned for reuse. Many harmful bacteria can be killed by exposure to sunlight; perhaps a simple solar concentrator could provide both high heat and sufficient UV to kill off most bacteria.

Reply

scbeauclair

1 Comment

  • 1373 Days Ago
  • 05/12/2008

Water -Alcohol

Could this concept be apllied to seperate water from alcohol in the production of corn, cane, or cellulose ethanol production?  Currenty 50-60% of process steam spent on disstillation.

Reply

mbloore

39 Comments

  • 1373 Days Ago
  • 05/12/2008

Re: Water -Alcohol

it says it can't filter particles smaller than one micron.  an alcohol molecule is much smaller than that.

Reply

scottaye

4 Comments

  • 1373 Days Ago
  • 05/12/2008

How about a few facts?

'Plastic tubing' gee that's helpful! What kind of plastic, how big are the pores, is it readily available in large quantites? How does this system compare to other filters? 10 times more effective than a sand filter for the same cost? 2 times better than a conventional RO? A comparison graph of filters would be helpful. PARC should already have this info, you just have to ask during the interview and incorporate it into the article.

Reply

zeddy

5 Comments

  • 1372 Days Ago
  • 05/13/2008

Filtering bacteria

Well, this device could be the primary stage, then once the large particles are removed, you could feed it through a reverse osmosis membrane system.

The membranes would take much longer to clog up, and as the liquid has already been filtered to a point, it would take less energy to operate.

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mbloore

39 Comments

  • 1362 Days Ago
  • 05/23/2008

desalination?

the article mentions the problem of brackish water, but the purifier as described is only good for suspended matter.  it won't remove dissolved salt.

Reply

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