The Daily News Egypt

Scientists reveal new method to remove heavy metals from water

About 1bn people do not have access to clean drinking water,WHO says

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An estimated 1 billion people do not have access to clean drinking water,a problem expected to worsen with climate change, according to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO). In addition, higher energy needs and increased use of heavy metals in industrial processes have increased human exposure to these toxic materials in drinking water in recent decades.

According to a new study published recently in the journal Central Science, which is affiliated with the American Chemical Society (ACS), researcher­s revealed a new material that can remove heavy metals and provide clean drinking water in seconds.

There are many sources of exposure to toxic heavy metals. Lead, in particular, has been used in paints, ceramic glazes, jewellery, toys, and pipes. Current commercial methods to remove heavy metals,including lead, from municipal drinking water can be expensive in terms of money and energy and are inefficien­t. In addition, some current approaches are either for single uses, are difficult to regenerate, or can produce significan­t toxic waste as side products.

The researcher­s of the study sought to attack this issue with materials called metal organic frameworks (MOFs) that are networks of organic chemical struts with metal nodes known to pull things like water and gases from air.That ability, plus the large surface area and chemical tunability of MOFs, make them a promising material to remove heavy metals selectivel­y from water.

During the study, the team created a water-stable MOF polymer composite with cheap, environmen­tally and biological­ly friendly materials and tested its ability to remove heavy metals from water. It had one of the highest reported removal capacities to date, removing over 1.6 times its own weight of mercury and 40% of its weight in lead.

The researcher­s tested the MOFs in solutions with lead levels similar to those found in contaminat­ed water samples from Flint, Michigan. They found that the material can rapidly reduce lead concentrat­ions to two parts per billion, which is the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency limit for drinkable levels.

Further, the authors removed lead from various real-world water samples from the Rhone River, the Mediterran­ean Sea, and a wastewater treatment plant in Switzerlan­d.The researcher­s also demonstrat­ed how the material could be regenerate­d easily without toxic products. The team said that they are now pursuing using other specially designed MOFs to remove other trace contaminan­ts in water.

 ??  ?? A metal organic framework can remove lead from water samples, getting them to EPA-approved levels in seconds
A metal organic framework can remove lead from water samples, getting them to EPA-approved levels in seconds
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