Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Now, a pill to test water quality at home!

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 29 Apr, 2014 12:09 PM
    Want to know if the water you are drinking at home is safe? You could soon test the water quality on your own instead of shipping it into a laboratory as researchers have developed a way to pack the laboratory into a simple pill.
     
    Drop the pill in a vial of water and shake vigorously. If the colour changes, you have got the answer. It is that simple!
     
    To reduce the sophisticated chemistry required for testing water safety to a simple pill, the researchers adapted technology found in a dissolving breath strip, used for keeping breadth fresh.
     
    “We got the inspiration from the supermarket,” said Carlos Filipe, a professor of chemical engineering at McMaster University in Canada.
     
    They created a way to store precisely measured amounts of enzymes and other active agents in pills made from the same naturally occurring substance used in breath strips.
     
    “This is regular chemistry that we know works but is now in pill form,” said John Brennan, director of Biointerfaces Institute, McMaster University in Canada.
     
    The researchers used a material called pullulan that protects sensitive agents from oxygen and temperature changes. It forms a solid when dry.
     
    Until now, such agents have had to be stored at extremely cold temperatures and shipped in vials packed in huge chunks of dry ice, at great cost and inconvenience.
     
    The technology is expected to have significant public health applications for testing water in remote areas and developing countries that lack testing infrastructure.
     
    It holds promise for other applications, such as packaging that could change colour if food is spoiled.
     
    The study appeared in the chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    How to win more 'likes' on Facebook photos

    How to win more 'likes' on Facebook photos
    An Indian-American student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, US, has devised a formula that tells how the contents of a photograph may predict its popularity online.

    How to win more 'likes' on Facebook photos

    Twitter selfies to reveal your mood

    Twitter selfies to reveal your mood
    What if selfies posted on Twitter can reveal our mood - whether people who live in “happier” cities tend to post more selfies and whether they smile more while taking self-portraits?

    Twitter selfies to reveal your mood

    Need a house? Print it in hours

    Need a house? Print it in hours
    In what could make the dream of owning a house a reality for a large section of people in developing countries, a Chinese company has devised a method of 3D printing a house.

    Need a house? Print it in hours

    This lift to zip you to 95th floor in 43 seconds!

    This lift to zip you to 95th floor in 43 seconds!
    Forget the world's tallest skyscraper Burj Khalifa in Dubai. This elevator in China will take you to the 95th floor in flat 43 seconds!

    This lift to zip you to 95th floor in 43 seconds!

    Great! Now an app to protect your credit card from hacking

    Great! Now an app to protect your credit card from hacking
    Bad news for credit card hackers. Here comes a 'remote control' app that can help you turn your credit cards on and off with the click of a button, and control when, where, and how they are used.

    Great! Now an app to protect your credit card from hacking

    Male Twitter users biased towards women: Study

    Male Twitter users biased towards women: Study
    Gender bias is real on Twitter. According to research, twitter conversations among men feature fewer mentions of women.

    Male Twitter users biased towards women: Study