Chalcogel Could Clean Water of Heavy Metals
By John Wolper
17:46, July 27th 2007
77 votes
Vote this story
Chalcogel Could Clean Water of Heavy Metals

A new discovery made by scientists in the US shows that a type of foam called chalcogel could finally solve the problem of the infiltration of heavy metals in Earth’s sources of water.

 The discovery, reported in the latest issue of Science magazine, has proven to be the ideal cleaner for waters infested with heavy metals like cadmium, lead or mercury.

Chalcogel is a rigid material that can be used to clean not only waters, but also other environments where the so-called “molecular sieves” are required.

A molecular sieve is a material containing tiny pores of a precise and uniform size that is used as an adsorbent for gases and liquids.

Molecules small enough to pass through the pores are adsorbed while larger molecules are not. It is different from a common filter in that it operates on a molecular level. For instance, a water molecule may be small enough to pass through while larger molecules are not. Because of this, they often function as a desiccant. A molecular sieve can adsorb water up to 22% of its own weight.

Unlike molecular sieves, chalcogels are particularly fond of heavy metals resulted from the industrial processing of coal, paper manufacturing and the chlor-alkali industry - which manufactures chlorine and caustic soda.

Their remarkable properties are derived from their chemical structure: chalcogels are actually a special type of “aerogels”- a low-density material derived from a gel in which the liquid component has been replaced by gas. Aerogels are nicknamed frozen smoke, solid smoke or blue smoke due to its semi-transparent nature and the way light scatters in the material.

Mercouri Kanatzidis, a chemist at Northwestern University in Illinois, US, and his colleagues obtained the chalcogels by linking clusters of chemical groups called chalcogenides with charged metal atoms - called metal ions. The elements sulphur and selenium are examples of chalcogenides.

Other useful properties of chalcogels are their lightness (since they are mostly made of air) and their enormous surface areas.

"A few cubic centimetres of this stuff has such a big surface area that if you were to unfold it, it would cover one football field," Dr Kanatzidis told the BBC News website.

"This surface area is so big that sooner or later, anything that goes into that material will hit the surface."

Worthy mentioning is chalcogels’ predilection for heavy and toxic metals, because of the sulphur and selenium that compose them.



© 2007 - 2008 - eFluxMedia
Share the News:
Del.icio.us Digg Stumble Upon Facebook Newsvine Mixx
dotclear

Other News in

Three Laureates Get the Nobel in Physics

In 1895, Alfred Nobel’s will was the cornerstone of the Nobel Prize: one of the wishes written in by the famous Swedish chemist in his last will was instituting the Prizes, with the help of his...

Asteroid To Entertain Viewers

Medium sized meteors enter our planet’s atmosphere a few times a year. There is no reason to panic, however, as they are not big enough to create any sort of damage. They usually go by...

Small Asteroid Disintegrates In Fiery Display Over Africa

Small Asteroid Disintegrates In Fiery Display Over Africa

A relatively small asteroid entered Earth’s atmosphere last night above Sudan. Just as predicted, the space object disintegrated upon entering our atmosphere, creating a ball of fire over the...

NASA's MESSENGER Starts Photo-Mapping Mercury’s Surface

NASA's MESSENGER Starts Photo-Mapping Mercury’s Surface

On its second flyby of Mercury this year, and the fifth in space exploration history, NASA’s probe is expected to show not only a different face of Mercury, but also a different perspective on the...

IUCN Red List: 1/4 Of World’s Mammal Species on the Verge of Extinction

IUCN Red List: 1/4 Of World’s Mammal Species on the Verge of Extinction

The world’s population of mammals is in constant decline, and at least one fourth of them are on the verge of extinction, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) revealed. The...

dotclear
Latest videos in Science
AIDS and cancer pioneers win...
Mammals in extinction crisis
No public show for Iraq's...
Solar clothes
NASA | Sea Ice 2008

dotclear
Science You are here: Science
» Science   » Health   
E-mail To A Friend Print RSS Text size: Decrease font size Increase font size
dotclear
dotclear
dotclear
Most Popular in Science
Update 2: Mammals Everywhere Need Protection!Update 2: Mammals Everywhere Need Protection!

» read full story
dotclear

Interested In This Topic?

News Alert will keep you informed. Find out more.
dotclear
Photos Gallery
dotclear
Today's Latest News
One Quarter Of Wild Mammals Threatened By ExtinctionOne Quarter Of Wild Mammals Threatened By Extinction

» read full story
dotclear