rainbow wrote:mistermack wrote:JimC wrote: Solar evaporation can certainly work without expensive energy inputs, particularly in a dry, sunny region on the coast, but requires a large area to provide significant quantities of potable water.
How does that work? I can see that it's easy enough to evaporate salt water, but how do they condense it?
Evaporation is the most expensive way to treat water.
Most of the water that is discharged is lightly contaminated.
You take out the poo and the condoms, filter it, add ozone, put it through activated carbon and then back into the taps.
Not rocket science.
In this country, it's compressed air that bubbles through the tanks, feeding the microbes that kill the harmful bacteria, and eat the shit. ( I think ). I've never heard of Ozone being used, but I might be behind the times.
They also drizzle it over rocks, which are coated with bacteria that eat the nasties.
That's another way of providing a big surface area for the air to get at the water.
Maybe they don't use it much in hot dry countries, where evaporation might spoil the party.
Over here they put it back in the rivers, although it's safe to drink, by the time it leaves the plant.
We ain't short of water so we don't need to drink it.
I have heard that man made reed beds are also ace at cleaning contaminated water. It's the same principle, they are full of bacteria that feed on the nasty stuff.