UDAS (Underwater De-Acidification System)
Disease spreading in underdeveloped countries is a widespread problem, affecting billions around the world. A major cause of this is unclean water reservoirs, making the water a common disease vector. UDAS can help solve this, by using a new combination of centrifuges and a class of molecules nicknamed “sponges”. This new approach would capture contaminants in the sponges, which, when saturated, link together to form a cluster of molecules large enough to be centrifuged out, leaving a cleaner mass of water. New classes of sponges could be made to specifically bind to any specific particle or even onto the surface of a bacteria or virus, effectively cleaning the water supply. If applied, this could positively impact the lives of many, preventing the spread of infectious disease globally in places where people suffer the most.
UDAS addresses the illness and disease issues of the Challenge, which is extremely widespread, afflicting 2.5 billion around the globe according to the CDC, primarily in poorer, crowded, and unsanitized areas. In these poor, dense populations, water-borne diseases can spread rapidly, leaving the people without a defence. A number of reasons lead to this, one is that the socioeconomic conditions in which the affected people live in cannot sustain a clean water supply. A second, which is not always the case, is a government that is unable or unwilling to help, and others include climate change, war, and other man made causes, as well as natural causes, like drought or an existing epidemic. In any case, help is needed, and in these densely populated, poor areas, UDAS can help bring water quality up.
The people that UDAS can help are in general poor, live in densely populated areas, and do not have the capabilities to improve their situation. The issue is not one of ignorance or misunderstanding, but rather of insufficient resources and circumstance. UDAS can help these people by giving them a cleaner water supply, significantly reducing the spread of diseases, and improving their health. This can uplift their lifestyle and physical health, thereby giving them a higher likelihood of improving in other areas. To many in the developed world, a clean water supply is taken for granted, but in these areas, it is an enormous privilege and opportunity for better health, and in turn, education, business, and other sectors.
Ocean acidification today is a massive problem involving the dissolution of carbon dioxide in the ocean surface, causing a chain reaction leading to a more acidic environment. If humans continue greenhouse gas emissions in their current state, the world ecosystem will be devastated. Previous research showed possible solutions using electrolytic dissolution of silicate minerals to raise the pH; however, this approach is extremely invasive and likely breaks down existing compounds in the seawater, and requires large quantities of energy. My new approach is described in the design of my device, called the Underwater De-Acidification System (UDAS). UDAS will directly combat the effects of ocean acidification and calcification in small, relatively isolated bodies of water by processing seawater. Its system will use chemical reactions with molecules designed to soak up and neutralize acids, and will require a liquid centrifuge to stratify and separate the protein-sized waste products. Some improvements to this design could be a higher proton and acid capture density of the compound, and the use of an advanced liquid centrifuge more geared towards sub-micron sized particles to increase efficiency, effectiveness, and environmental advantage of the system.
- Prevent infectious disease outbreaks and vector-borne illnesses
- Concept