The National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI)
has developed an indigenous and economically viable process with
domestic and community applications to reduce high fluoride content in
potable water.
According to an NEERI release, a chemo-defluoridation domestic
unit consists of a steel container fitted with a sand filter at its
bottom.To reduce the fluoride content, a fluoride bearing water (30 L) is
added in the container followed by dosing of the salts of calcium and
phosphorous chemical coagulants with manual stirring.
When these salts are added to the fluoride-bearing water,
they gradually get dissolved and precipitated absorbing fluoride from
water, the release said.The water along with the residue is then passed through the sand
filter to get the treated water with fluoride less than the permissible
limit of 1.0 mg/L, it said.
The process can be used for reduction of fluoride concentration from
5-8 mg/L to less than 1.0 mg/L (milligramme per litre). The process
does not affect the palatability of water.The release further said that efficiency of the filter is reduced
roughly in a month due to settling of chemical precipitate on the sand
filter which can then be manually cleaned by removing the top layer of
the precipitate settled on the sand bed.
The cost of the household unit is about Rs 2000 and the treatment
cost incurred is around 20 paisa per litre. The units are suitable for
the small fluoride-affected villages where community water supply
schemes are not economically feasible, the release said.
The NEERI, a constituent laboratory of the Council of Scientific
& Industrial Research (CSIR) achieved the chemo-defluoridation of
potable water with high fluoride content in collaboration with the
Mumbai-based Rajeev Gandhi Science and Technology Commission.
No comments:
Post a Comment