Technology
Water filters made from untreated wood can remove more than 99 per cent of particles, taking out many harmful bacteria and microplastics
Douglas fir wood can be turned into a water filter
Janet Horton / Alamy Stock Photo
Slices of wood can act as water filters that remove bacteria and microplastics with more than 99 per cent efficiency, potentially offering a cheap way to protect people from water-borne illnesses.
Previous research has investigated more complex methods to make wooden filters involving complex chemical treatments, but these would be impractical in lower-income countries where water-borne illnesses cause hundreds of thousands of deaths a year, say Antoni S??nchez-Ferrer and Jenifer Guerrero Parra at the Technical University of Munich, Germany.
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