The Herald

How solar power can clean up water for 77 million

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A SOLAR-POWERED purificati­on system could provide remote communitie­s in India with clean drinking water for the first time, researcher­s believe.

Scientists at Edinburgh University say they are developing low-cost, low-energy technology to decontamin­ate sewage water in hard-to-reach villages.

The initiative could provide safer drinking water and help to reduce the spread of disease, experts hope.

Water contaminat­ion is a major problem in the developing world. About 77 million people in India do not have access to safe drinking water, more than any other country in the world.

To make dirty water safe to drink, visible traces of waste are removed with filters and then any remaining bacteria is broken down.

Chemists and engineers on the team are adapting their existing technologi­es to power this second stage in the decontamin­ation process.

Their “simple” system uses sunlight to generate highenergy particles inside solar-powered materials that activate oxygen in the water to “incinerate” harmful pollutants and bacteria.

Dr Aruna Ivaturi, of the university’s School of Chemistry, said: “We are aiming to provide people in rural India with a simple off-grid water decontamin­ation system.

“This could be achieved by simply fitting our modified solar-activated materials to containers of contaminat­ed water positioned in direct sunlight.”

The team hopes to incorporat­e technologi­es developed during the project into larger-scale initiative­s.

The project is being carried out with the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research in Pune.

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