Water filters have a long history as a
method of water purification, beginning as early as 2000 b.c.e. in ancient
Egypt. Filtration has evolved from the simple Hippocratic
sleeve of ancient Greece, made from cloth, to the complicated solid
block carbon and multimedia water filters currently on the market. Water
filtration is now the premier method of water purification, removing more water
contaminants, more efficiently, than any other technique.
The filtration process
involves some type of filter media, over which water flows. This filter media
blocks passage of contaminants through physical obstruction, chemical adsorption, or a combination of both processes. Material construction
of the filter media varies widely, but the most effective medias are made from
carbon or a combination of carbon with other elements. Modern filtration
technology allows water filters to remove more and more contaminants through
the chemical process of adsorption. In the adsorption process, contaminants are
encouraged to break their bond with water molecules and chemically adhere to
the filter media. Generally, water goes through several stages of filtration to
ensure that each filter media will remove the ultimate number of contaminants.
Water normally passes through a water filter at a relatively low speed, in
order to ensure adequate contact time with the filter media. Once the water has
passed through the required stages of filtration, it emerges as pure drinking
water, free from contamination.
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