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Sérénité
8th May 2014, 09:45
Hello fellow Avalonian's, hope you are all keeping well :grouphug:

I've just read this article on Inhabitat.com and thought I would post here for those who may find it useful...


A new report by MIT researchers suggests that if you run out of drinking water in the woods, all you need to do is to break off a branch from the nearest pine tree. Next pour lake water through the branch and this low-tech filtration system can produce up to four liters of drinking water a day. A small piece of sapwood is reportedly able to filter out more than 99% of the bacteria E. coli due to the size of the pores in the xylem tissue.

http://assets.inhabitat.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/2014/03/pine-water-filter-537x405.jpg

Co-author Rohit Karnik, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at MIT, says that “sapwood is a promising, low-cost, and efficient material for water filtration, particularly for rural communities where more advanced filtration systems are not readily accessible.”

“Today’s filtration membranes have nanoscale pores that are not something you can manufacture in a garage very easily,” Karnik says. “The idea here is that we don’t need to fabricate a membrane, because it’s easily available. You can just take a piece of wood and make a filter out of it.”

While there are plenty of water purification technologies on the market today, most rely on chlorine treatment, which works well but is expensive. Boiling water requires fuel, which may not be available in an emergency. Man-made membrane-based filters are expensive and can become easily clogged.

The amazing thing about sapwood is its porous xylem tissue, which conducts sap from a tree’s roots to its crown. This system of vessels and pores contains pit membranes small enough to trap bacteria and keep it from spreading throughout the wood.

“Plants have had to figure out how to filter out bubbles but allow easy flow of sap,” Karnik observes. “It’s the same problem with water filtration where we want to filter out microbes but maintain a high flow rate. So it’s a nice coincidence that the problems are similar.”

http://www.plosone.org/article/fetchObject.action?uri=info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0089934.g002&representation=PNG_M

http://inhabitat.com/mit-for-clean-drinking-water-all-you-need-is-a-stick/

Krist
8th May 2014, 11:09
Thank you.This is very useful IMO.

pyrangello
8th May 2014, 11:32
Many thanks , way cool indeed!

ulli
8th May 2014, 11:51
Just yesterday we went to town, a half day trip, to replace the water filter in our Britta-like system, only to find out that they no longer carry the line.

Thank you so much for this info. It is heaven sent, for sure.

conk
8th May 2014, 16:59
Then hug and thank the tree. You'll be connected to healing energies. American Indians say to sit with your back to a pine tree to alleviate joint pains.

Sierra
8th May 2014, 18:12
Oh dear, feeling dumb...

I get the first three pictures, but once the piece of pine is clamped as a xylem filter, how does it work? Does the filter sit in a bucket of water as pictured upright? Is the water level above or below the tubing?

Thank you. :)

Sierra

Snowflower
8th May 2014, 19:09
I think you'd need to have the water going through the tube, and have the end of the tube with the branch in it hanging over a glass to accept the water as it flows through the branch and drips out the end. I'm going to try it. I have some tubing around, plenty of pine branches, and even have a clamp.

8Adamas8
8th May 2014, 19:59
http://www.redorbit.com/media/uploads/2014/03/5a47c440-8788-0131-ab21-26f6b9091d0e.jpg

O_jxNRIHoGo

Octavusprime
8th May 2014, 20:30
The white pine is said to be one of the better trees for this purpose with a good flow rate. Be careful not to use the branches of the Yew tree which is toxic. It has pine like needles, flaky bark with a redish hue and red berries when fruited. All other pines are safe although eating too much of any pine can be dangerous.

Yew: 'The tree that kills twice' due to the poisonous nature, and the fact that bows were made from its wood.

Cheers

Octavusprime
8th May 2014, 20:55
Oh one more thing. Make sure you only peel off the bark. The white fleshy part under the bark contains the xylem. If you scrape too much off you will get to the woody interior that will not conduct the water.

Sierra
8th May 2014, 21:40
Thank you 8Adamas8, the video is very clear. :)

White Pine seems to be an eastern and north eastern US tree, used a lot for Christmas trees.

25751



A Yew tree...

25752

Yew tree close up?

Simonm
10th May 2014, 00:01
The white pine is said to be one of the better trees for this purpose with a good flow rate. Be careful not to use the branches of the Yew tree which is toxic. It has pine like needles, flaky bark with a redish hue and red berries when fruited. All other pines are safe although eating too much of any pine can be dangerous.

Yew: 'The tree that kills twice' due to the poisonous nature, and the fact that bows were made from its wood.

Cheers

While it's true that the the branches, needles of the yew are poisonous, the red berries are edible, providing you don't break the seed inside.

Also, as an aside, by boiling water and cutting the needles from any pine, discounting the Yew, dropping the cut needles into the hot water will give you a very good boost of Vit C.

If your out walking in areas that may necessitate such measure I would advocate people learn basic life saving skills. In the post above it's claimed that boiling water requires fuel, that the easy bit, but how often do you walk round the woods carrying plastic pipe and jubilee clips?

Octavusprime
10th May 2014, 00:13
Adding tubing and a screw clamp to my survival kit would be easy. Attaching it to a collapsible bladder would keep it lightweight and portable.

Krist
19th May 2014, 15:11
The thread that is still giving.thanks to every one for the extra info.