3/5/07 Contact:
Charles Martin, (334) 844-9999 (marticd@auburn.edu),
or Mike Clardy, (334) 844-9999 (clardch@auburn.edu) AU
PROFESSORS RESEARCH LEADS TO ADVANCED WATER FILTERS IN INDIA AUBURN
- An Auburn University chemistry professors research is leading to safer
drinking water in India through advanced, longer-lasting water filters. Professor
Dave Worleys N-halamine technology is the basis for the in-home filters
that HaloSource Inc. introduced March 1 in Bombay, India. The company, established
in 1998 on the potential of Worleys discoveries, pays royalties to the university
through a technology transfer agreement. Many millions of people
in India do not have sanitized drinking water, so there is a great need for this
filter, said Jeff Williams, senior vice president and cofounder of Seattle-based
HaloSource, which is partnering with Indias Eureka Forbes company. We
test-marketed filters in hundreds of homes in India last year and are excited
about the positive response. The filters contain polystyrene beads
that hold oxidative chlorine or bromine atoms for long periods of time and that
can be easily refurbished - the results of Worleys N-halamine chemistry.
He has received 30 patents in the course of discovering this process that binds
the atoms to the surface of various materials. Worley, an Auburn faculty
member for 33 years, won the universitys Creative Research and Scholarship
Award last fall for his development of the technology. It has many
potential applications that could improve health around the world, especially
in less-developed areas, Worley said. To activate the filters,
chlorinated or brominated water is passed through them to anchor the chlorine
or bromine atoms to the beads. When untreated water with bacteria, mold or virus
cells pass through the filter, the cells pick up the atoms which sink into the
cell walls and kill them. The filters can be refurbished periodically just by
running chlorinated or brominated water through them again. The
use of chlorine in city treatment plants will kill bacteria only for a short time
period, he said. This may be several hours inside dark pipes, from
the water treatment plant to the faucet. Sunlight reduces effectiveness even more,
which is why chlorine tablets must be continuously added to your swimming pools.
Indias water supply gets contaminated during the monsoon season, and
it has high levels of calcium and magnesium, causing water hardness about six
times greater than in the United States. Current attempts to disinfect
water include putting tablets in a pail of water and stirring and drinking, which
does not provide enough water volume and it leaves the water with a bad taste.
Some filters just remove dirt and make the water look clean, but it still
contains harmful bacteria, said Worley. Indias cities quickly
outgrow the capacity of municipal water systems, so water is primarily provided
by street vendors, who pull 1,000-gallon tanks behind tractors and then pump water
to roof-top tanks. In Bombay alone, several million people buy their
water off the street. None of it is sanitized, said Williams, who adds that
HaloSource plans future introductions of its filters in more countries. More
information about HaloSource is available at its Web site, http://halosource.com/prodhalopure.asp.
(Contributed by Charles Martin.)
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Auburn offers more than 230 undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degree programs. mar07:AU-waterfilter Media
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images, are available at http://www.ocm.auburn.edu/newsmakers/water_filter.
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