Sunday, January 27, 2008

Simple Field Tests for Water Quality

We’ve been performing some quick and inexpensive tests on the water sources around Pun Pun Farm to assess water quality. Three parameters of concern when designing the water treatment system are turbidity, dissolved iron concentration, and microbial contamination.

Turbidity

Turbidity (cloudiness owing to suspended solids and/or organic matter) in the source water may cause clogging of sand and charcoal filtration units. Turbidity also reduces transmittance of UV light through water and thus markedly reduces the effectiveness of UV disinfection.

There are several ways of quantifying turbidity in water, the most common being some measure of the attenuation (reduction in strength) of light as it passes through a column of water. Electronic turbidity meters are the most precise; however, they are expensive. A turbidity tube is inexpensive and easy to construct, and provides an approximate measurement of turbidity with sufficient accuracy for field water quality assessments.



To measure turbidity, sample water is slowly added to the tube and the depth (in cm) recorded when the target disk at the bottom of the tube becomes invisible.

Dissolved iron

Excess iron in water used for drinking, cooking and washing imparts unappealing color and taste, and reduces the effectiveness of UV disinfection by impairing transmittance of UV light through water. If the amount of iron in a water supply is above the US EPA and World Health Organization guideline of 0.3 mg/l (0.3 ppm), the water can cause staining of laundry or discoloration of faucets and basins. However, even high concentrations of iron are not considered a health problem.

The water treatment system at Pun Pun Farm will incorporate a slow sand filter to precipitate excess iron from solution.

Microbial contaminants


We’re using the simple hydrogen sulfide (H2S) test to detect the presence of fecal coliforms in water samples from around the farm. Hydrogen sulfide-producing microorganisms are often associated with fecal coliforms, and thus indicate that a water source may be contaminated with human or animal feces.

The test is inexpensive and simple to administer – a microbial growth medium and iron source are added to the water sample and the sample is incubated at around 30 Celsius for 24 – 48 hours. If the hydrogen sulfide-producing indicator organisms are present, then the H2S they produce will combine with iron to form iron sulfide, an insoluble black precipitate. If no H2S-producing microbes are present the sample will remain clear yellow over the 48-hour incubation period.

This test does not detect fecal coliforms directly but responds simply to the presence of H2S. There are a variety of biological and geochemical processes that may result in the presence of H2S to the sample, giving false positive results for the test. Also, the test does not distinguish between fecal coliforms originating from the digestive tracts of animals versus humans. However, given the broad scope of the test and its sensitivity, a negative test result lends strong confidence that the water source in question is free of fecal contamination.


The water treatment system at Pun Pun Farm will use a combination of a slow sand filter and disinfection by germicidal ultraviolet light to neutralize the threat of biological contamination of the community’s drinking water.

You can find more detail about these methods for DIY water quality testing on the Aqueous Solutions website, where our technical paper Simple Field Tests for Water Quality is available for download from the Resources page.

Derek Wall visits Basudha

Please see Erratum above...

Derek Wall is the Principal Male Speaker of the Green Party of England and Wales, and recently visited my friend Debal Deb at his agricultural biodiversity research and conservation center (called Basudha, Bengali for Earth-Mother) in West Bengal, India.

Apparently Debal was as inspirational for Derek as he has been for me. Derek blogged an account of his visit to Basudha and quoted at length from my article that appeared on this blog last fall.

Read Derek's post about Debal and Basudha on his blog Another Green World.

And the post from this blog about my visit with Debal: Agricultural biodiversity conservation in West Bengal.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Aquaduct wins first prize in "Innovate Or Die" contest

Someone has managed to combine two of my biggest interests: biking and water purification.



The Aquaduct is pedal powered vehicle that transports, filters, and stores water for the developing world. A peristaltic pump attached to the pedal crank draws water from a large tank, through a filter, to a smaller clean tank. The clean tank is removable and closed for contamination-free home storage and use. A clutch engages and disengages the drive belt from the pedal crank, enabling the rider to filter the water while traveling or while stationary.

The Aquaduct is the winning entry in the Innovate or Die contest put on by Google and Specialized. The contest challenge was to build a pedal powered machine that has environmental impact. See the website www.innovate-or-die.com for more details.

The only way I can see to improve upon this would be to add a fermentation tank so that the water can be made into beer.

Monday, January 14, 2008

How to cut bottles for building decoration

First, fill the bottle you want to cut with water to the depth at which you want the cut. (Note: clean water works too!)

Next, attach a wire with a bit of cloth or wick material around it at the water level.

Soak the cloth with kerosene.

Burn the cloth...



When the fire goes out, the glass should have cracked owing to the temperature difference across the glass from inside to outside.


With practice you can reliably get clean cuts right where you want them.
Photos courtesy Tai Power Seeff (taipowerseeff.com).

Sunday, January 13, 2008

Nature rulez

Photos courtesy Tai Power Seeff. See more of Tai's incredible photography at taipowerseeff.com







Pun Pun kids having fun in the mud

Photos courtesy Tai Power Seeff. See more of Tai's incredible photography at taipowerseeff.com