Modified milk proteins hold some promise to remove heavy metals from water according to recent studies. If confirmed it is a big breakthrough that a common product might hold a key to cleaning up contaminated water - with heavy metals such as lead and arsenic as well as radionucleide metals eg radium often seen as ground water contaminats in many countries including much of Asia.
Reports from Washington recently noted that scientists had found that proteins similar to those implicated in
Alzheimer’s disease could help purify polluted water, according to Science News.
A new
membrane uses thin amyloid protein fibers to pull heavy metals and radioactive
wastes out of water. The membranes can capture more than their own weight in
some contaminants, said scientists in the Jan. 25 report in Nature
Nanotechnology.
“I think
what’s really interesting in this study is that it actually used a protein
material, which is novel,” said Qilin Li, an environmental engineer at Rice University in Houston
who was not involved in the study. Specifically, the team converted milk
proteins into fibers of durable amyloid protein. Other amyloids are infamous
for building up in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients, but the team put their
amyloids’ sticky tendrils to different use.
When paired
with strong, porous carbon in a membrane, the lab-made amyloids successfully
filtered over 99 percent of toxic materials out of solutions that mimicked
severely polluted waters, the scientists report. The amyloids trapped particles
of lead and mercury at a molecular site that is involved in turning the
original milk protein into its pasty form. Radioactive waste particles also got
tangled in the membranes. And the membranes snagged gold contaminants, which
the team found could later be recovered and purified. A membrane with less than
6 milligrams of amyloids could trap 100 milligrams of gold, the scientists
report.
It’s exciting
to see that the amyloids can hold more than their own mass in heavy metal
particles, said Li. More typical membrane materials, she says, would grab only
a fraction of their weight in pollutants.
The membranes
could be developed for small- or large-scale water purification units, said
study co-author Raffaele Mezzenga, a physicist at ETH Zurich. Mezzenga
estimated the technology would cost roughly one dollar per every thousand
liters of water filtered. And a membrane can recover hundreds of times its own
value in precious metals, Mezzenga says. The membrane design is simple and
flexible, and could be adjusted to optimize cleanup or metal recovery, he says.
Li said the
membranes will need to be tested and optimized in real polluted waters, which
may have chemical complications such as high or low acidities. But the
amyloids’ performance is encouraging, she said, and the proteins’
contaminant-trapping capabilities could inspire other researchers developing
contaminant filters.
Partially sourced from Water Technology
1 comment:
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