$1 million is definitely just prize for removing arsenic from water

Abul Hussam, an associate professor of chemistry at the George Mason University has developed an innovative solution for removing arsenic from drinking water. It is known as the SONO filter. This household water treatment system is being manufactured and distributed in Bangladesh by Hussam and his brothers (Hussam is from Bangladesh). He has been doing this for five years. According to him the filter has been instrumental in stopping the spread of arsenic poisoning in at least 100 villages in Bangladesh. Before this, Bangladesh’s tube wells ( 4 million tube wells have been installed in Bangladesh since 1998!) had water containing arsenic around 10-50 times above the safety levels!

How does SONO Filter work? It is a point-of-use method for removing arsenic from drinking water. A top bucket is filled with locally available coarse river sand and a composite iron matrix (CIM). The sand filters coarse particles and imparts mechanical stability, while the CIM removes inorganic arsenic. The water then flows into a second bucket where it again filters through coarse river sand, then wood charcoal to remove organics, and finally through fine river sand and wet brick chips to remove fine particles and stabilize water flow.

Now, Abul Hussam has got another recognition – he has won the National Academy of Engineering’s Grainger Challenge Prize for Sustainability Gold Award. The prize is a million dollars. Kudos, Abul Hussam!

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“Ledal” (light emitting pedal) to make cycling safer

News from UK:

Steve Sumner, a 51-year old from Winterbourne Bassett, has invented an intelligent pedal light, which is expected to reduce cyclist related accidents. The invention has been named as “Ledal”.
Steve has worked as a firefighter in London for around two decades.
How does it work? The Ledal uses LED lights which are lighted by sensors on the pedal. It will emit white light forwards and red light backwards, and will be visible from a distance of 1000 m on low visibility roads.
Steve Sumner worked with Trevor Keena for designing the Ledal. The manufacturing was done in China.
It has already won BBC Tomorrow’s World inventions award, the Genius Prize from the Association of Hungarian Inventors and a gold medal at INPEX, Pittsburgh. Steve expects to bring this to the market in a big way by the end of the year.

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