Reverse Osmosis
Filtration
The reverse osmosis
water purifier protects you from the harmful effects of
lead, heavy metals, chlorine, chemical contaminants,
pesticides, pathogens, bacteria, virus, and even
radioactive materials.
RO is the most convenient and effective
method of water filtration. It filters water by squeezing
water through a semi-permeable membrane, which is rated at 0.0001
micron (equals to 0.00000004 inch!). This is the technology
used to make (only the purest, but not all) bottled water, it is
also the only technology capable of desalinating sea water, making
it into drinking water
Non-RO water filters are much less
effective, and the pore size on these filter media are much bigger,
generally 0.5 - 10 micron. They can filter out coarse particles,
sediments and elements only up to their micron rating. Anything
finer and most dissolved substances cannot be filtered out. As a
result, water is far less clean and safe compared to reverse osmosis
filtration.
What is
Reverse Osmosis?
Reverse
Osmosis, also known as Ultra-Filtration by the industry, represents
state-of-the-art in water treatment technology. Reverse Osmosis (RO)
was developed in the late 1950's under U.S. Government funding, as a
method of desalinating sea water. Today, reverse osmosis has earn
its name as the most convenient and thorough method to filter water.
It is used by most water bottling plants, and by many industries
that require ultra-refined water in manufacturing. Now this advanced
technology is available to homes and offices for drinking water
filtration.
How It Works
In short, it is the process by which
water molecules are forced through a 0.0001 micron semi-permeable
membrane by water pressure. Long sheets of the membrane are
ingeniously sandwiched together and rolled up around a hollow
central tube in a spiral fashion. This rolled-up configuration is
commonly referred to as a spiral wound membrane or module. They are
available in different sizes for processing different quantities of
water. Typically, a module for home water treatment is as small as
2" diameter and 10" long, while one for industrial use may
be 4" diameter and 40" long.
For the membrane to be usable it must
be in some type of container (membrane housing) so pressure can be
maintained on its surface. It is this pressure that supplies the
energy to force the water through the membrane, separating it from
unwanted substances. The most amazing aspect of RO is that the
substances left behind are automatically diverted to a waste drain
so they don't build up in the system as with conventional filtering
devices. This is accomplished by using a part of the unprocessed
water (feed water) to carry away the rejected substances to the
drain, thus keeping the membrane clean. This is the reason to why RO
membranes can last so long and perform like new with minimum
maintenance even after years of operation.