Close X
Thursday, November 14, 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

    Indian Mars Orbiter completes 100 days in space

    Indian Mars Orbiter completes 100 days in space
    India's maiden Mars Orbiter spacecraft completes 100 days Wednesday cruising through interplanetary space in its voyage towards the red planet.

    Indian Mars Orbiter completes 100 days in space

    Human arm sensors are here

    Human arm sensors are here
    In a novel bid to make future robots understand human movement better and act more efficiently, researchers have created human arm sensors - a first.

    Human arm sensors are here