District to run water treatment research
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Jenny Marder
The nation’s depleted drinking water supply has led researchers on a
quest to find new resources, and Newport-Mesa’s main water supplier,
the Orange County Water District, will serve as the test subject.
The district was selected by the National Science Foundation to
serve as the testing site for a nationwide research program aimed at
developing new water treatment technology. The water utility will use
a $99,000 grant, guaranteed by the foundation for the next five
years, to analyze equipment designed to purify water.
The team also includes researchers from Stanford University, the
University of Illinois and Clark Atlanta University.
The program’s goal is to increase and improve the world’s drinking
water supplies by focusing on technology that purifies compromised
water sources such as seawater and sewage water.
Central to the project is development of reverse osmosis
membranes, which are becoming common in the water purification
industry and edging out other kinds of water treatment technology,
said Don Phipps, director of research at the Orange County Water
District, the source of about 66% of Newport-Mesa’s water.
The reverse osmosis membrane is a device that separates water from
salt, bacteria and other constituents. Water molecules move easily
through the membrane, while salt and contaminants move more slowly
and are caught before passing through.
Reverse osmosis membranes take up less space, and therefore
require less real estate than other larger systems, because of their
mechanical and chemical simplicity.
“As time goes by and we continue into the 21st century, this
technology is going to become more widespread, and the use will
become more common at both the small scale and the industrial scale,”
Phipps said.
The membranes, are hardly perfect, though, Phipps said. They could
be cheaper, more energy efficient and less prone to problems.
Chemical and biological species, for example, are known to collect on
the surface of the membrane, making it difficult for water to pass
through.
“There’s a number of areas where we need to see new developments,”
Phipps said. “We’re working on a membrane that can produce a
better-quality product for less cost.”
The membrane samples will be created at Stanford and then sent to
Fountain Valley, where the research team will put the systems to
work, performing extensive experiments and testing to weed out what
doesn’t work.
Ron Wildermuth, the district’s communication director, said that
this is just one more step in the agency’s “tradition of innovation.”
“To be participating with this level of expertise demonstrates the
quality of people here at the Orange County Water District,”
Wildermuth said. “We’re talking the best in the country and maybe the
world.”
Shrinking water supplies are the project’s driving force. Many
water treatment experts such as Phipps believe there is a global
water crisis.
“It’s in our best interest not to waste that precious resource
that we have,” Phipps said. “Water is worth human lives. You can’t
exist without water.”
Phipps hopes that these new systems will play a part in bailing
out the dry nation.
“We need to be able to be much more efficient on how we deal with
our water, and what stands between us and that water supply is the
appropriate technology,” Phipps said.
* JENNY MARDER is a reporter with Times Community News. She can be
reached at (714) 965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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