Stuff You Should Know - How Reverse Osmosis Will Save the World
Episode Date: July 15, 2021Can we save the future of the human race with some thin membranes riddled with ultra-tiny holes? Science says yes! Thanks to reverse osmosis filtration, we can turn saltwater to fresh and finally say,... Water, water everywhere so let’s all have a drink! Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey friends when you're staying at an Airbnb you might be like me wondering could my place be an Airbnb and if it could what could it earn?
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Slash host hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I hard podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass
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What advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation if you do you've come to the right place?
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Welcome to stuff you should know a production of I heart radio
Hey and welcome to the podcast I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's over there somewhere on the other side of the membrane
because she's insane
Remembering and this is stuff you should know
I think it's pretty funny that I used to love Cypersill
Oh, I downloaded their album again. Yeah the other day. Yeah, and it's it still holds up insane got no brain
I love that guy. I don't remember his name actually now. I think about I don't remember the other dude's name either
I just remember their DJ was DJ mugs, right? That sounds about right. Yeah, I remember his name
I don't remember the other like the 2m. I don't remember. I think they liked marijuana smoke if I remember here there. Yeah, yeah
Yeah, they had a song about a bong. I believe yeah hits from the bong
That's right. I'm gonna go listen to that now. You should listen to the album again. It's still pretty good
They I mean they're talking about like shooting people and everything. You're just like come on now
You don't do anything like that. No, they don't but
You know there are other stuff the other stuff they talked about it's pretty good
Yeah, so I am literally gonna go listen to that now and you can talk about reverse osmosis
All right, so Chuck you made a reference before we started
Recording that sounded really familiar to me
But it's probably only gonna sound familiar to like eight other people you referenced osmosis Jones, right? I did
And I was like who is that it sounds really familiar and I cannot for the life of me place it and then you said it's from our TV show
Still can't really place it, but I now I kind of know what you're talking about actually and now I'm doubting myself
Okay, I think osmosis Jones is
Is a movie
Okay, yeah, I think you're thinking of Nash Pluto. No, no, no osmosis Jones is a Chris Chris Rock animated movie
Okay, I got it mixed up with something our one of our co-star actors used to say a lot
Which was to say Jones on the end of anything
That's right, and I think it reminded me of osmosis Jones, but I have COVID so I'm all over the place
You are all over the place
But one thing where you really nailed it Chuck and I'm really appreciative that you brought up osmosis Jones is because we're talking about
Osmosis today and in particular we're gonna focus mostly on reverse osmosis, although we'll have to talk about regular osmosis as well
How does that sound?
Yeah, I mean, can I go ahead and talk about regular osmosis?
I mean, is there any better time I can't think of a better time certainly not in our radium girls episode
Yeah, I mean this is basically like if you took chemistry in high school and you have forgotten everything about it since then
Mm-hmm. You might hear the words osmosis and reverse osmosis and be like wait a minute. That's that's tickling my brain a little bit
I know I knew that at one point
So just a little basic chemistry 101 is
Let's just talk about salt water lay it on us
Salt water is gonna figure in have a
Almost said heavenly heavily here because as you'll see reverse osmosis is a great kind of modern way to
Sort of the hip new way to take salt from water so we can drink it
Like if you make a cup of if you make a cup of salt water and you gargle it, you know for your throat
Mm-hmm. You have some leftover you could use reverse osmosis to convert it back into regular water
That's right. I don't waste it and we talked about I know we've done stuff on desalination
It's been a while. Yeah, we did we did an episode way back in the day. Yeah hauled
Is it possible to drink the ocean or something like that?
What exactly what happens when we run out of water, I think is what it was. Yeah, I was way off and
And then I'm pretty sure we talked about drinking the ocean
We also did one on manufacturing water too, but yeah, yeah, we talked about this
Desalinating before that's right. So back to chemistry 101. It's very simple
I don't know if you folks remember what a solution is but a solution is when in this case
It's with salt water you have a solvent which is the water and then you have the solute
Which is the salt or I think you dissolve in the water. Yeah, or
Or whatever else you wanted to have in there and this whole thing together is called a solution
and if you put this solution in a
YouTube not why oh you to you be e dot com but a literal beaker shaped like a tube
And you had a semi permeable membrane in the middle
Let's just go ahead and say Gore-Tex in this case because that's what that is shout out Gore-Tex
And you poured this stuff in there on one side, and then you poured regular water on the other side
That water on the other side is gonna want to just balance out
It's gonna want to seek thermodynamic equilibrium
And it's gonna fight its way through there through that membrane until everything is
Nice and level it's got this osmotic pressure and it's gonna push through there until it reaches that equilibrium because that's where it wants to be
And that's us Moses. Yeah, because nature is seeking equilibrium and because the the the higher
Concentrated side is separated by a membrane from the lower concentrated side
It's got to make it through that membrane to even things out and as it does
It's actually gonna push the concentrated side up the beaker because it's moving into that side through the membrane
It's pretty amazing stuff, but yeah, that's I mean that's osmosis Chuck nicely done
Why don't you tackle reverse osmosis?
So reverse osmosis so osmosis what you just described as a passive process it happens because
The atmosphere above us has weight like air has weight
And in fact if you took one square inch of a column of atmosphere of air
From the surface of the earth all the way up to the exosphere the tippy top of the atmosphere
That one square inch column would weigh about 14 and three-quarter pounds
So another way to put it is there's fourteen point seven five pounds per square inch of pressure at surface level on earth
And because of that pressure we have that osmotic pressure
And so these the stuff can kind of move from one side to the other from lower concentration to higher concentration to balance things out
And it's all because of that, but the whole thing's a passive process. There's nothing moving
This is not it's not requiring energy to take place
Okay, with reverse osmosis you're doing the opposite of what you just described and it actually does take energy
You have to create more pressure that will overcome the osmotic the natural osmotic pressure
And what you're doing in that case is actually taking the solvent in this case water and moving it out
against its natural will against every
fiber of its being screaming at you that no this is wrong. This is an importance against nature
It's moving it through that membrane to the other side to the lower concentration
So what you're doing is taking a concentrated solution and making it even more concentrated by taking out the in this case
The water so what you have on one side is salt water and then salt water concentrate and what you have on the other side
Is just pure water what they call ultra pure water and that's basically reverse osmosis
Yeah, so if you're looking to
To make salt water not salt water and you had a couple of tanks and on one side you had that
That solution of salt water or let's just call it salt water
Okay, and it's under that, you know regular osmotic pressure that we were talking about
It's all happy and well you got to apply I think about 50 to 60 bars of pressure
And you got to push that thing through there and those salt molecules are too big to pass through the membrane
And it's it's really pretty easy. It's not the most. I mean, I can't go out and build one of these
But it's not the most complicated process. It's really just if you think about trying to fit something too big
Through a small hole. It's not gonna go everything else will so what's left over is salt or you know, sort of a briny solution
right and
What you're saying is like using pressure to push it through like that's that basically makes sense
But but when you're almost you're not using pressure to push it
You're just increasing the pressure in that concentration and then reverse osmosis happens by magic because you've overcome that natural
Osmotic pressure and now you know to the to the solution or the salt water and the ultra pure water
You know, what's up is down nothing makes sense anymore all bets are off because you've overcome that natural osmotic pressure
So it's not exactly like pushing it through a membrane, which is how my brain kept going
There's like it's it's a little more magic than that
But the upshot of it is that that membrane you're using is so small the pores in it are so small
That only water can make it through and water it turns out is really small Chuck. Do you want to have small water is sure?
Well prepare for it because I'm about to lay it on you the average
Actually, it wouldn't be average. It'd be exactly the same size the size of a water molecule is point two seven nanometers
Which is twenty seven hundred thousandths of a micron and a micron is a millionth of a meter
So a human hair's diameter is about 70 microns a water molecule is
2700 thousandths of one micron
So it's really really small which means that if you can make a membrane that is small enough
Large enough for water to get through but not much larger than that
It's gonna keep a lot of other stuff from passing through that membrane as well
That's right
Maybe we should take a break and we'll talk a little bit about what we've been teasing
Which is desalination right after this
Hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I hard podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road
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It's like smoking you might not smoke
But you're gonna get secondhand astrology and lately
I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention
Because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it
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Tantric curses major league baseball teams canceled marriages kpop
But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology
My whole world can crashing down situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father
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It changed
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All right, so if you want to I mean water is a commodity we've been talking about that a lot on the show for a while and kind of trying to bang that drum that
potable drinking water
You know, it could be a crisis in the near or far future for the world
So there have been a lot of efforts over the years
It could be a crisis in the near or far future for the world
So there have been a lot of efforts over the years
Kind of to try and get ahead of this a little bit and the ocean is an obvious place to look because there's a lot of water out there
Sure
So the efforts have been made since I believe about the 1950s
To try and turn that that salt water into something that people can drink or at least use, you know for other purposes
You know, not necessarily like potable water, but you know using in industries and stuff like that. Yeah
And in particular, we've known how to like distill or to get water from salt water pure water from salt water using distillation
But that uses a lot of energy where you boil the water
It takes a lot of energy to boil water and boil the salt out of water
And that was kind of the first attempt, but I think in the 60s they started to say
Maybe we could take this osmosis thing that's happening all over the place and reverse it and and we started to say
That's happening all over the place and reverse it and and we could use that to get salt out of water
Yeah, and they figured out how to do it and it was going pretty well
But they didn't have a great way to do it on a large scale
That made it kind of financially practical to do
Until a couple of engineering grad students at ucla came along
One was named sydney lobe and the other was named
Srinivasa
Suri Rajan
Boy, I think I nailed that
Yeah, you did
Would you say it another way or no?
No, and I don't have their names in front of me, but I think that you it sounded pretty believable chuck
You know what I do? Here's a little trick for you
Okay, and of course this only works is if you're pronouncing the parts correctly, but I just like I look them up on the internet
I call them and ask them how to say their name. Well, you could sometimes I look on youtube to see if they're interviewed, but
um
I just spell it out dictionary style like syllable by syllable with big spaces in between
Oh, yeah, yeah, and then do you make the one with the emphasis the syllable with emphasis like in all caps or something like that?
Sometimes or else they'll scribble a underline or you know, none of it's like uh, like real
dictionary style
No, what is that called the schwa?
Yeah, I don't I don't even know what a schwa is. It's the upside down e
Oh, that's a schwa
Yes, what's the word we were talking about the other day that I loved in terabang swing. Oh, yeah
Schwing I hate schwing. You hate schwing. Oh, I think everybody hated schwing for a little while there. Yeah, not a fan
So all right, so I nailed those two names. They were grad students at UCLA
And they were the two gentlemen who came up with this
basically the first practical
Uh reverse osmosis membrane using cellulose acetate
And it was the first time that they could actually use this on a large scale and they did so
Uh, this is actually more of a small-scale operation, but the idea was the same uh at a place in
uh, colinga, california in 1965 that was online for seven years, uh, and worked pretty well from what I understand
Yeah, and at the very least it was a very good, um
Proof of concept, I guess, you know, and it's showed that yeah with this new this new acetate membrane
You know like you were saying you can get a lot more through it at a much faster pace
Um, and that's kind of what you'd need if you're going to ramp this up for industrial style production
And they definitely did that was 1965. You said it went on online. Yeah
So today is as of 2019 there's now 177 different countries. It's great producing desalinated water using reverse osmosis and in fact
There's I think 16,000 desalination plants in the world by far the most are in africa and the middle east
But there's a total capacity now today just since 1965. This has developed
Where a hundred million cubic meters of fresh water can be produced every day worldwide
That is just not so from taking
Sea water and in using reverse osmosis to turn it into pure fresh water
That's right. And uh, those numbers are growing and they need to which is which is a great thing
I love it when we figured out how to do something
And then it's just a matter of sort of getting more and more of it going
Yeah, yeah, I mean, yeah, and I think from what I understand, you know, everybody's trying to figure out like, um,
You know how to build on efficiencies and how to continue to scale up and how to use less energy and time and all that
But it's it's it seems to be one of those technologies that's roughly the same as it was when they invented it initially
and basically, um, to kind of give just a little bit of detail on on how it goes, it's it's
You you take in seawater most reverse osmosis plants that, um,
desalinate seawater built pretty close to the sea, um, because
Transportation is is a big cost. So if you can just pipe it right from the sea
into your plant that saves on a lot of cost and time and energy
Um, it's ramped up using pumps and then it's run through the the reverse osmosis filters
And under pressure that like you said, I think 60 bars of pressure
So it's pressurized so that it it overcomes the natural osmotic pressure and it is it goes over
Not through like I keep wanting to think of it going through like there's a membrane in the water's way
And it has to go through this membrane. That's not how it goes
it goes through a tube and in the center of the tube is another tube, um, that's wrapped in the membrane
and the the
Concentrate the the salt keeps going, but the water that's in that concentrate that salt that solution
Goes through the membrane into that inner tube
And the inner tube pushes that fresh water that that reverse osmosis water along
Into what's called the production water stream
And then that salt water just continues along its way back out to the ocean under pressure
And what's called the reject stream, which is not nice
But it's you know an accurate description and then that's that's how like you would desalinate water
It is reject reject water stream. Sure. Although just the reject stream
Sure. Okay. There you go. When you have three names. I think there's more an album title
So maybe just reject stream
Yeah, I think reject stream is great and we'll talk about that more later not the band but
Well
Are the imaginary band we'll go song by song on their debut album. Yeah, and who's playing what?
Uh, so reverse osmosis is not the kind of thing that you can just use for salt water
It's a great application, of course, but it can you know, you're filtering something out
So you can filter out almost anything
Um, if you have a local water source that has way too much fluoride
You can filter out some of that fluoride in a much more efficient way than you can using
charcoal filtrations
Uh, we did a show on fluoride like a thousand years ago. I remember that one. Yeah, I think it's this fluoride making us stupid
That way I feel like that was one of our like 15 minute episodes or something. Yeah easily at most
Uh, I think some you talked about the ultra pure water, which is the you know one side of the result
And some companies need that stuff and some industries need that stuff. So sometimes you're filtering out things
Just to get that ultra pure water to use uh as an industry application
I think uh when you're manufacturing electronics sometimes or pharmaceuticals
Um different kind of chemicals certain medical applications
Uh, we talked about wastewater a lot of the toilet to tap thing. That's using reverse osmosis
Right. That's one of our best episodes. I think
Do you think so wastewater treatment? Yeah, I mean it's hard to say best episode when we've been doing this for
80 years, but uh, I thought it was a good one. No
Yeah, I thought it was good too. I was just surprised to hear you say that but yeah, I thought it was really cool
Yeah, and toilet this happens. It's just gross, but it it it's
It's sensible for sure
And the the the point of it is is it's gross
Entirely in your mind like when you raise that glass of water that used to be waste water
It's just water after it's undergone reverse osmosis like that's it. There's nothing else in it
There's not even a memory of that kind of stuff, you know, just despite what homeopaths say
There's nothing in that water except for the water. There are some things that make it through
Um, what are called contaminants of emerging concern?
Um, some kinds of pharmaceuticals can actually make it through
They're small enough that they make it through with the water molecules
But for the most part most everything else is filtered out by reverse osmosis
Um, and one of the reasons that uh, or one of the other industries that use it chuck is like the beverage industry
Yeah, because you can take tap water from anywhere
Run it through reverse osmosis filter and move even more of it through faster because you're not having you're not dealing with a
Briny salt solution like this is just tap water and you're convert you're basically turning it into a blank slate
So you could make like a soft drink taste the same anywhere in the world
Just by using the local tap water to produce it, you know
And now you have production facilities all over the world
So you don't have to transport it because you're able to start with reverse osmosis water. Oh, yeah, they use it
Separating way from milk. They use it in the wine industry some now
They use it to make maple syrup. They remove that that sugary goodness from the water in the sap
What else?
Let's see. They use it for recycling one of the other this is a big big deal as we'll see
Um
When you when you produce all sorts of stuff
Through industrial processes or if you recycle things you have to use all sorts of other chemicals
You produce also like sorts of wastewater as a byproduct and wastewater is really hard to get rid of
Without contaminating other water because it mixes really well
So one of the good things you can do is take wastewater run it through reverse osmosis
And you're basically catching all of the stuff that was once mixed in with the water
Um and making it into a much more disposable much closer to solid form
And then also producing reverse osmosis water that you can use for all sorts of other applications as well
And speaking of recycling
A little bit different kind of recycling
But some of these and you know not all of them there, you know, there's nothing
That gets me going more than a contained system
Yeah, and some of these are contained systems, which is when you have a system that kind of feeds itself
Uh, we talked about these high pressure pumps that force out. What did you call it again? What was the band?
Uh reject stream the reject stream
No, not the god help you if you call them the reject stream just reject stream
That's like a letterman misstep or something
And you got a cool logo with just an r and an s that sort of are snaking around each other or something like that
This is what I see
Do you know you remember the grateful dead kid with the ice cream going on his head?
Sure
Something along those lines, but then rather than an ice cream cone. He's got a reverse mohawk
Like the bad guy in death wish three
See I was thinking more like the white snake logo
Oh, no
I don't think so. No, you just blew my mind a little bit. I'm trying to recover here by tap dancing, but
I don't know man. Maybe not to get further down this road
But I the other day I saw that there was some big festival in europe with all these metal bands and I was like
Oh, it's kind of cool and white snake was playing. I was like, are those guys still playing?
It's like, let me go check them out and see what they sound like
Just do yourself a favor and go to youtube and watch like a white snake festival from
Like just like put in 2019. Let's say do they just play all their old hits or are they making new music?
Oh, well, I don't know. I can't speak to that the old hits or what's on youtube
Okay, um, it's not it's not great. David. So is it still okay?
I'm so glad you said his name too because I almost said David Copperfield
It's great. He makes the stage disappear beneath his feet. That's right
It makes you forget
That's the most important part. Yeah, it's it's not great. It's uh, just just go check it out
Boy, this covid's got you trashing everything the radium girls movie white snake 2019. I know. I love white snake
You know tonic a stain passed away. Maybe that's something to do with it. What?
Yeah, she died a couple years ago. I think
I didn't know that. Yeah, or maybe even last year. It might have been covid. No, I don't know. I'm I'm
You're riffing. Yeah
Are you on meds right now? No, no, I'm high on like stuffy-headedness
I got you, you know the natural high
Sure, so where was it? Oh, yeah contained system. So they're pumping out this stuff
Uh with high pressure and as we'll see
Uh, that can go just go out into the ocean again and we'll talk about that more later
But they can also use that that force of pumping this stuff out
To use it to spin a turbine our old friend spinning a turbine
And basically reusing that stuff to to make it a closed system where it's operating itself
Yeah, pretty amazing. I get jazzed by that as well. And I just realized Chuck
Basically these desalination plants that are close to the ocean are basically a giant youtube
And in the middle, there's that membrane
But really also in the middle is the the entire desalination plant
But it's just coming up one side and passing through the other
Actually, it's not a very good analogy now. I think about it. But it's a u-shape at least. How about that? Yeah
Yeah, you can also get them under your sink or on your countertop in your kitchen like it sounds like the most
You know large-scale scientific thing you could imagine, but if you just go to a big box
Hardware store that in you look up water filtration systems. A lot of them are reverse osmosis
Yeah, yeah, you're um, you're going to be hard-pressed actually to find one that doesn't have that like one of those under sink
Like multi filter multi stage. Yeah water filters that comes with its own faucet that you have to install but they don't
I was looking they're actually, you know, um
I think they've actually come down since this article was written a couple of years back, right?
Yeah, something like that. It seemed like you can get a pretty good one for about 200 $250 like basically everything you need
Yeah, and then there's also countertop versions too if you want to just have one on your countertop
But I say I say we take a break
Okay. Yeah, because we've talked all upside
Right. There's a dark side to this
Well, not really, but you know, there's some down downsides or drawbacks. Nothing dark. I would say that might be overstating it. Agreed
All right, well, we'll be back right after this everybody
Hey, I'm lance bass host of the new iHeart podcast frosted tips with lance bass
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road
Oh, okay. I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would lance bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help this. I promise you. Oh god
Seriously, I swear and you won't have to send an sos because I'll be there for you
Oh, man. And so my husband Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep
We know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life
Step by step. Oh, not another one. Uh-huh kids relationships life in general can get messy
You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Just stop now
If so, tell everybody you everybody
About my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye. Bye. Bye. Bye
Listen to frosted tips with the lance bass on the iHeart radio app apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
Okay, chuck, welcome to the dark side of reverse osmosis
Whoa
Very nice. You got compliments on your um, bella legosi. Oh, yeah
Yeah, it was very good. I don't remember what episode that was. I don't know. I'll take it. I'll take any compliment
Sure. Same here unless you're really good at not doing podcasts. Well
Yeah
Took you a second, didn't it? It really did. I think I have sympathetic covid
I'm a little foggy myself. That's sweet. Well, you know, you got to get out of that bunk bed underneath me. You might catch it
So first before we get started I want to shout out perth australia chuck get this
43
3% of perth's drinking waters made from desalinated seawater from reverse osmosis
They have two plants there. We probably drank some while we were there. I'll bet we did. I'll bet we did. I didn't know it couldn't even tell
Best
So, uh, it was right
So, uh, you know, it's funny is everyone outside of australia got that joke because I guarantee you they didn't show that ad in australia
And they also think that tom brokaw runs motel six. That's right
So we were talking about the dark side of of uh, of reverse osmosis plants are desalinating using reverse osmosis and reverse osmosis in general
There's some problems with it for one. It's really
I don't want to say it's really energy intensive
It's actually not as bad as you would think but the more you scale up
And you know where you're supplying say almost half of your your town's drinking water through reverse osmosis desalination
Yeah, like the energy usage scales up
So the cost can scale up and then also
So does the carbon footprint of these things because you know, they're burning fossil fuels to run those pumps to pressurize that
Column of water when they send it across the reverse osmosis membrane to overcome the osmotic pressure
That's a that's a real big. That's a that's a problem with it. I guess you could say
Yeah, I would say that uh, another problem that we we teased earlier was the
um
I guess what do you call it a harmful byproduct or just a waste waste byproduct reject stream. Yeah
Sure, okay
But it is it is a byproduct that basically it's salt. It's brine
It is there's a lot of it left over
And you got to do something with it if you're not going to run it back into a closed system
And some places they just say all right. Well, it's it's salt water in very concentrated form
So let's just pump that back into the ocean
And I'm glad I kept reading because my first thought was like
Well, sure it's salt water, but that can't like the ocean has a certain amount of salinity on purpose probably
And that that can't be great to just add a lot more
And uh, my instinct was right. It's not uh, I think australian
Center for uh, water research says
Things get back to normal at about 1600 feet 500 meters from the source
It's pretty pretty far. Um, so anything within that that 1600 feet
It's it's really bad news when they're pumping that stuff back in
And you know, it's a fish can get out of there pretty quickly
But if you're not a fish if you're something that crawls along on the seafloor or or plant life on the seafloor
Then that's really bad and it's going to kill off a lot of stuff in that area
Yeah, which is problematic. I mean high salinity
Decreases the dissolved oxygen and fish and sea life need oxygen in the water
So it's it is a real problem for that that life that can't move away very easily
And then in addition to that too, they actually introduce certain kinds of chemicals and metals
Into the um, the stream the feed the feed water stream
To keep the membranes from fouling up right as which happens really easily you can imagine if you have a
Membrane that has pores that are just big enough to allow
Something that's 2700 thousandths of a micrometer a micron across through like all that stuff
That's left behind is going to gunk up the membranes really quick. It's going to get insane in that membrane
So they take exactly so they take steps to keep this from fouling from getting clogged up by adding additional stuff
Well that additional stuff also gets pumped out in the ocean too, which is a problem as well
there are calls for um
Additional steps to be added onto that reject stream so that before it hits the ocean
It runs through like a uv light that kills off pathogens. Maybe
Or maybe they need to filter out some of the stuff and reuse like the chlorine and the copper that they're introducing
There are things that we could do to make the whole thing a little more environmentally friendly for sure
yeah for their uh
I think the plant operators in australia say that
They're like you're pumping it out so fast made it mixes in really quick
And I don't know if I buy that
I mean it makes sense that it mixes faster than if you're just like leaking it out slowly, but
I would say to spread it out a lot more if you could I mean maybe that's not practical and that's just like a
A dumb guy who doesn't know how it works talking, but
You know I would disperse it more
Yeah, I mean I guess you kind of could you could you could put like a
Like a sprinkler head on the end. So it's not just one big column. It's just kind of yeah, it's diffuse
Just when I thought it was a dumb idea. No, it's a great idea
Now we need to go invent like a giant sprinkler head and patent it and use it
It's not just a danger for oceans too. Um, most of these plants obviously are near the ocean
Um, but if there are plants that are more inland and they're storing this stuff in tanks
Uh, you could just like you have an oil spill you could have a saline like a brine spill
And that would be really really harmful to the dry land vegetation and plant life and the whole ecosystem
And you know, I don't think we uh, we kind of walk past the fact that when you're
Pumping this stuff in the sea. It's not just like oh some lobsters and coral dyes
Like that's part of the ecosystem that's going to set off a chain reaction
Uh, to everything around it as well
Yeah, um, so there there are people who are trying to come up with like we were saying like more
Efficiencies and ways around some of these problems. One of the things I saw
Was out of the national laboratory in Idaho
Um, that uses something called switchable polarity solvents. Did you see that? No
So there's a different kind of osmosis that they're using that doesn't require
Um, the artificial pressure built up using pumps and all that so automatically it's less energy intensive
And they add a kind of chemical called a switchable polarity solvent, which when you add it to
The solution it actually raises the osmotic pressure itself. So the water comes out of solution
Um on its own without having to be pressed and then that switchable polarity solvent comes with it
You hit it with some heat and it basically shocks the sps that chemical out of the water
Um, and then you have you've just got your water and then you just remove that switchable polarity solvent
So it requires far less energy, which is a big improvement for sure. That's pretty amazing
It is and I saw another one that uses a double piston setup where when they they do the the water treatment
Basically in batches where they add it to that barrel that has the hollow barrel going through with the membrane involved
The actual reverse osmosis filter in on an industrial scale
They add it in batches and they use a piston to push the water through
And then as the pistons moving there's another chamber opening up behind it that's getting filled with seawater
So there's no downtime where like the piston moves to one side
And then seawater fills up and then the piston moves to the other side
It's just constantly going back and forth and on either side there's seawater that's being treated or filling up to be treated next
So you don't have downtime, but then also the seawater that's coming in is pushing the piston the the other way too
So it requires less energy as well
Um, and I think that one's out of Purdue
So there's some people figuring out how to make this a little better less energy intensive a little faster
um, and we'll probably see a lot of
A lot more solutions, especially as water becomes more and more precious
You know starting now basically
Yeah, they're also trying to find more uses for that brine instead of trying to put it in the ocean
They're like, you know, surely people can use brine, right? Sure. And there are some aquaculture
applications in commercial aquaculture
I think tilapia farms
If if you like tilapia, I'm not a big fan
But tilapia love really I think high high salinic. Would that be it? Sure high salinic water
Sure, I mean at this point it doesn't matter
All right, great. They like really salty water. That's how I should have said it
salt salt water
And I think brine do as well. So they're they're starting to ship some of that stuff there and I think um
Sometimes it can be used to grow
So stuff like sea beets
Or an animal feed or in biofuel
But I don't think it's like
They're still going to be that byproduct even if they even if every tilapia farm on earth wanted this water, you know
This brine stuff and especially the more we produce the more brine we're going to have because I don't know if we said it or not for every one
Leader of fresh water you produce you've got 1.5 liters of briney water higher salty
Concentration water that you're sending back out to see to kind of mess with the salinic
count
So that's reject streams um first album
What what is it again? Salinic count salinic count rejects game. All right. So chuck
There's actually we got to finish on this one point. There's a debate especially it seems like on facebook
um
as to just how uh
Healthy reverse osmosis water is and in a lot of ways it makes sense on its face to tell you the truth
Is it really on facebook?
That seems to be the kind of
Like the the kind of sites that are really okay touting this seem to to have their links promoted on facebook a lot gotcha gotcha
That's as diplomatic as I can okay
so um
So the idea is that reverse osmosis is all well and good for preventing pathogens viruses chemicals
Minerals metals from passing through and when you run water through reverse osmosis filter
The ultra pure water you have on the other side is is great
But the the the point of these that these people are making is that it's actually too great
It's too pure and that humans actually need more stuff than just
A hydrogen and oxygen mixed together that we need other kinds of like trace minerals in our water
and um that reverse osmosis strips it out
So there's this um, there's remineral
remineralization filters that you can actually get for your reverse osmosis filter to where it goes through all the stages
Pre-treatment treatment reverse osmosis and then on the other side the last filter is remineralization
Where it might add a little bit of boron a little bit of you know sea salt something like that
Um, it's got a little calcium in it and now the water is ultra pure
But also beneficial for your metabolism's optimal function. It makes a lot of sense
I didn't see a lot of academic debate over it. It was happening more peripherally. It seemed like so
That's why I'm a little a little incredulous of the whole thing, but it makes a lot of sense, you know
I like a good mineral water
Yeah, and apparently also if you um, if you want if you have reverse osmosis at your house
And you are like, I can't afford a remineralization picture. Just give yourself a little Himalayan salt
Or a little bit of sea salt. You should have that anyway
That's more than just salt that contains a lot of other
beneficial elements and
Metals alkali earth metals and stuff and just put a little little sprinkle in there. Yeah, there you go a little dabble to you
That's right
That's the second album from reject stream
They're going pop. They're like kings of leon. They started out kind of edgy and then the record company came to call in and they said
Sign us up. I love that first king of kings of leons album. And then they uh
They said, all right hillbillies go get a haircut
Yeah, and get rich
They're like get hot. Yeah
Uh, you got anything else about kings of leon? Nope
Okay, uh, well if you want to know more about kings of leon reject stream reverse osmosis desalination any of that stuff
Um, go check it out on the internet. See what happens when you search all that at once
Maybe the universe will explode since I said the universe will explode. It's time for listener mail
Uh, I'm gonna call this conveniently an email from peth
Oh, wow, isn't that crazy? It's a full circle man. That's
It's synchronicity. Uh, I'm not simplicity serendipity
I'm not gonna read it in my terrible posse accent though. I wish you would
I can't do it. I'm fading. Uh, hey guys big fan here from far far away western Australia
My husband and I spent two years traveling and exploring Australia in a yute
towing a caravan
I don't know what that is
SUV van truck
Uh, and in the process discovered the delights of stuff you should know. It was great for days with long outback drives
I remember our very first episode that I randomly selected when we lost our podcast virginity
cave diving
Totally nuts and we were hooked
Uh, we have sent return home to our city of uh, peth
Because of cobit put an abrupt end to their travels and now they listen on their daily drive to and from work
Luckily, there are so many years worth of shows for me to catch up on
On our travels. We spent a week in the outback town of kuber petty
That is p e d y
c o o b e r kuber petty
Where a lot of worlds of the world's opals come from
You should do an episode on opals any who
I couldn't help but notice that you failed to mention
That uh that town in the selects cave dwelling episode
Uh, I listened to that one recently despite most of the town living underground
And having some beautiful underground churches. Check it out on google
Uh, there's another any who
Keep up the good work. I'll keep listening warm wishes. Uh, that is from tamra
Well, thanks a lot tamra any who appreciate that did tamra spell it h o o or w h o
Uh, a and y h o o
Oh, yeah, there's two kinds of people in the world and it's divided by how you spell any who there are three kinds
They're
You know what the third is what the people who don't use any who?
I don't know chuck. I think we all have a little bit of any who user in all of us
I think you're right that brings you can take the person out of the any who but you can't take the any who out of the person
You sure said it
Uh, well, thanks again tamra and uh shout out to perth for a third time. Why it might as well make it a hat trick
And if you want your town to get shouted out, why don't you get in touch with us or build some massive desalination plants?
One of the two or a statue of us
That would help a lot actually
You can get in touch with us via email at stuff podcast at iheart radio dot com
Stuff you should know is a production of i heart radio
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