A natural substance obtained from seeds of the "miracle tree" could
purify and clarify water inexpensively and sustainably in the developing
world, where more than 1 billion people lack access to clean drinking
water, scientists report. Research on the potential of a sustainable
water-treatment process requiring only tree seeds and sand appears in
ACS' journal Langmuir.
Stephanie B. Velegol and colleagues explain that removing the
disease-causing microbes and sediment from drinking water requires
technology not always available in rural areas of developing countries.
For an alternative approach, Velegol looked to Moringa oleifera,
also called the "miracle tree," a plant grown in equatorial regions for
food, traditional medicine and biofuel. Past research showed that a
protein in Moringa seeds can clean water, but using the approach was too
expensive and complicated.
So Velegol's team sought to develop a
simpler and less expensive way to utilize the seeds' power.
To do that, they added an extract of the seed containing the
positively charged Moringa protein, which binds to sediment and kills
microbes, to negatively charged sand. The resulting "functionalized," or
"f-sand," proved effective in killing harmful E. coli bacteria and
removing sediment from water samples. "The results open the possibility
that … f-sand can provide a simple, locally sustainable process for
producing storable drinking water," the researchers say.
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