McGill researchers develop a new and inexpensive way of filtering water using silver nanoparticles
McGill researchers develop a new and inexpensive way of
filtering water using silver nanoparticles
Disasters such as floods, tsunamis, and earthquakes often result
in the spread of diseases like gastroenteritis, giardiasis and even
cholera because of an immediate shortage of clean drinking water.
Now, chemistry researchers at McGill University have taken a key
step towards making a cheap, portable, paper-based filter coated
with silver nanoparticles to be used in these emergency
settings.
“Silver has been used to clean water for a very long time. The
Greeks and Romans kept their water in silver jugs,” says Prof.
Derek Gray, from McGill’s Department of Chemistry. But though
silver is used to get rid of bacteria in a variety of settings,
from bandages to antibacterial socks, no one has used it
systematically to clean water before. “It’s because it seems too
simple,” affirms Gray.
Prof. Gray’s team, which included graduate student Theresa
Dankovich, coated thick (0.5mm) hand-sized sheets of an absorbent
porous paper with silver nanoparticles and then poured live
bacteria through it. “Viewed in an electron microscope, the paper
looks as though there are silver polka dots all over,” says
Dankovich, “and the neat thing is that the silver nanoparticles
stay on the paper even when the contaminated water goes through.”
The results were definitive. Even when the paper contains a small
quantity of silver (5.9 mg of silver per dry gram of paper), the
filter is able to kill nearly all the bacteria and produce water
that meets the standards set by the American Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA).
The filter is not envisaged as a routine water purification
system, but as a way of providing rapid small-scale assistance in
emergency settings. “It works well in the lab,” says Gray, “now we
need to improve it and test it in the field.”
The research was funded by the National Sciences and Engineering
Council of Canada (NSERC) and the work is part of the NSERC
Sentinel Bioactive Paper Network.
The team’s findings were recently published in the Journal of
Environmental Science & Technology. For an abstract of the
article, please visit: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/es103302t
For more information about Derek Gray’s lab: http://www.mcgill.ca/pprc/members/gray/
Complete article available on request.