MIT scientists have developed an inexpensive, solar-powered water treatment system for Indian villages. They have designed, built and tested the prototype system to be installed in a village outside of Hyderabad.
They found that thousands of people in the Mhasawad village in Maharashtra regularly drink water with a salinity level above 1,200 parts per million (ppm). The World Health Organisation (WHO) recommends levels under 600 ppm.
In order to design a water treatment system that was affordable and would actually work in the context of rural Indian villages.
Scientists believe that by designing a community system that can provide tasty, desalinated water at an affordable price, all villagers will be more likely to consistently drink water that is clean and healthy, even if they have to pay for it.
RO (reverse osmosis) systems, installed in many villages, work by using a high-pressure pump to push water through a membrane; the saltier it is, the more energy that is required to move the water through.
The problem is that after the first pass through an RO membrane, the now-pure water has been removed and what is left is concentrated saltwater.
It requires even more power to move this water through the membrane – so much more that the cost of the power outweighs the benefits, and manufacturers forgo a second pass to keep the costs down. This leads to wastage of water.
The researchers instead chose electrodialysis reversal (EDR), because at the area’s typical salinity level of 500 to 2,000 ppm, it requires 25 to 70 per cent less energy than RO and can recover more than 90 per cent of the feed water.
They then replaced grid electricity with solar power, decreasing operational and capital costs at the same time.