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      Porous ceramic tablet embedded with silver nanopatches for low-cost point-of-use water purification.

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          Abstract

          This work describes a novel method to embed silver in ceramic porous media in the form of metallic silver nanopatches. This method has been applied to develop a new POU technology, a silver-infused ceramic tablet that provides long-term water disinfection. The tablet is fabricated using clay, water, sawdust, and silver nitrate. When dropped into a household water storage container, the ceramic tablet releases silver ions at a controlled rate that in turn disinfect microbial pathogens. Characterization of the silver-embedded ceramic media was performed using transmission electron microscopy. Spherical-shaped patches of metallic silver were observed at 1–6 nm diameters and confirmed to be silver with energy dispersive spectroscopy. Disinfection experiments in a 10 L water volume demonstrated a 3 log reduction of Escherichia coli within 8 h while silver levels remained below the World Health Organization drinking water standard (0.1 mg/L). Silver release rate varied with clay mineralogy, sawdust particle size, and initial silver mass. Silver release was repeatable for daily 10 L volumes for 154 days. Results suggest the ceramic tablet can be used to treat a range of water volumes. This technology shows great potential to be a low-cost, simple-to-use water treatment method to provide microbiologically safe drinking water at the household level.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Environ Sci Technol
          Environmental science & technology
          American Chemical Society (ACS)
          1520-5851
          0013-936X
          Dec 02 2014
          : 48
          : 23
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904, United States.
          Article
          10.1021/es503534c
          25387099
          df25abe9-37f5-4df7-b96b-146341dd081f
          History

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