MS launches two water treatment membranes

11 December, 2011 (23:13) | Filters Events | By: Yu

Membrane Solutions, a US developer of advanced membrane products for water and wastewater treatment applications, has developed two new membrane products for the global water treatment marketplace, the FEDI fractional electrodionization (EDI) and Q-SEP hollow fibre ultrafiltration modules.

The FEDI (fractional electrodionization) technology produces high purity water and, according to Membrane Solutions, is an improvement on EDI for the production of high purity water for power and semiconductor applications. Unlike conventional EDI, FEDI stacks are able to tolerate hardness in the feed water and as a result, FEDI can be used after single pass reverse osmosis (RO) without the need for softening, or second pass RO, on most feed waters.
Each FEDI stack is equipped with two sets of electrodes. Hardness and the majority of the other ions are removed in the bottom of the stack at low current density and low scaling conditions, while the final product water polishing takes place in the top of the stack at high current density. 
The Q-SEP hollow fibre ultrafiltration modules contain ultrafiltration membranes manufactured with QUA’s Cloud Point Precipitation method which helps ensure a high pore density along the length of the fibre and uniform pore size distribution in the membrane. QUA says that Q-SEP modules can deliver improved product water quality when compared to conventional ultrafiltration modules, with low silt density index (SDI) and improved rejection of bacteria and viruses.
The modules are made from a hydrophilic polyether sulphone (PES) material that provides high fibre strength and improved low fouling characteristics. The membranes operate under low trans-membrane pressure in an inside-out flow configuration. The Q-SEP is suitable for the pre-treatment of RO systems (brackish and seawater applications), the purification of surface and well water for potable applications, the filtration of industrial water, and wastewater recycling and reuse.

Agilent’s 2200 TapeStation, New Software from BGI, MIT/Harvard’s CummeRbund, and More

3 December, 2011 (20:49) | We Love Filters! | By: Yu

Agilent Technologies has launched the Agilent 2200 TapeStation to automate next-generation sequencing sample and library quality control. The benchtop instrument comes with prepackaged, ready-to-use ScreenTape consumables and is compatible with 16-tube strip vials and 96-well plates.

Chinese genome center BGI has released several new or updated bioinformatics applications, pipelines, and software tools.

They include an updated SOAP package, available here, with SOAP3, a short read aligner; SOAPindel, an indel finder; SAPfusion, a gene fusion detector; SOAPsplice, a splice-junction detector; SOAPdenovo-Trans, a de novo transcriptome assembler; and Metacluster 4.0, a binning solving tool for metagenomics.

Also available are cloud-based analysis software tools for next-gen data analysis, such as GAMA to estimate allele frequency and GSNP for SNP detection; and Adam to sort and remove duplicate reads. In addition, BGI released Hecate 2 and Gaea 2, updated versions of de novo assembly and resequencing analysis tools.

BGI has also launched GigaDB, a publicly available database that houses large-scale genomic datasets from a variety of organisms, including E. coli, foxtail millet, potato, Chinese cabbage, cucumber, pigeonpea, sorghum, ants, roundworm, naked mole rat, sheep, silkworm, Tibetan antelope, and human. Each dataset is assigned a digital object identifier. GigaDB is affiliated with GigaScience, a new research journal published by BGI and BioMed Central.


The computational biology group at MIT’s computer science and artificial intelligence laboratory and the Rinn Lab at the Harvard University department of stem cells and regenerative medicine have released CummeRbund, an R/Bioconductor package that simplifies the organization, access, exploration, and visualization of the various output files of a Cuffdiff differential expression analysis. The software is freely available under the OSI approved Artistic License 2.0 and can be downloaded here.

In addition, CummeRbund has been included as part of the new R/Bioconductor v2.9 release and can be installed in a similar manner to standard Bioconductor packages.


Genedata has released Genedata Expressionist 7.0 for Genomic Profiling. The system simultaneously analyzes transcriptomics, copy number variation, variant, and DNA methylation data. It includes a genome browser that can visualize terabytes of data and provide real-time feedback at every processing step.

Cosmic Ray

1 December, 2011 (17:47) | Uncategorized | By: anthea

Some of the mysterious, high-energy cosmic rays that bombard Earth may hatch from a colossal, gassy superbubble carved into space by hyperactive young stars in the Cygnus X region of the sky.

Cosmic rays are actually subatomic particles — mostly protons petri dish and electrons — that zip across space, perhaps spurred to nearly light-speed by supernova shockwaves or stellar winds. Because they’re charged, the particles are bounced around by magnetic fields during their journies, making it difficult to follow their paths back to the beginning. “It’s like trying to cross a Jacuzzi,” says Grenier, of the University of Paris Diderot.

To get around this wandering particle problem, Grenier and the team decided to track gamma rays, which are produced when cosmic rays collide 96 well plates with interstellar particles and which the team could use to trace the rays’ origins. The team aimed the space-based Fermi Large Area Telescope toward Cygnus, hoping to spy a telltale glimmer from gamma rays inside the region’s superbubble, which is more than 100 light-years across and contains more than 500 massive stars.

A safer, cleaner home

27 November, 2011 (19:58) | Filters News | By: Yu

MANILA, Philippines – Providing innovative technology in more than 60 countries, 3M has been bringing to Filipino homes efficient products in home improvement. One of these is Filtrete, the product that seeks to answer the country’s need to improve air quality in the homes through a pioneering air filtering technology.

Around 18 million Filipinos live in cities with unhealthy levels of airborne particulate matter, especially in the most populous metropolitan area in the country, Metro Manila.

“Filtrete will make your home your safe haven where you can breathe, easy amid the ruckus and pollution outside your home,” shares Vivian Faustino, home and office business division head, 3M Philippines.

With an immediate need to clean the air Filipino families breathe especially where they live, electronic air cleaners that seem to cost a fortune and difficult to maintain, a more effective and convenient method of purifying air is a new necessity. Now, with the Filtrete Air Condition Filters, a cleaner and healthier home for Filipinos is possible and easier to have.

Turn your air conditioning unit into an instant air cleaner with Filtrete. Its filtering material prevents growth of bacteria, molds, mildew, or fungi, capturing harmful particulate matter that usually just pass through other regular air filters, reducing the risk for allergic reactions, asthma attacks, and other respiratory problems, making it highly encouraged and recommended by the American Lung Association as the brand of choice when it comes to air filtering needs.

Filtrete’s Electrostatic Fibres are a groundbreaking innovation in air filtration with positively and negatively charged media that act like magnets, trapping microparticles ranging from 100 large to the smallest 0.001 microns.

“3M takes pride in continuously innovating and improving our products to improve the homes of many Filipinos. Going beyond just home improvement to air improvement, 3M becomes a key player in promoting good health in the country. We look forward to providing Filipino homes all over the country with the opportunity to breathe a little bit easier with 3M’s Filtrete,” says Faustino.

Unraveling synesthesia

25 November, 2011 (16:39) | Uncategorized | By: anthea

A sense-mixing condition in which people taste colors or see smells tends to run in families, and recent studies have homed in on a selection of genes that may contribute to the phenomenon, called synesthesia. Understanding the condition’s genetic basis might reveal why it has perpetuated in humans and help scientists develop cures for degenerative neurological diseases.

Only about 3 percent of the population claim to experience some form of synesthesia, but nearly half of those report having a close family member 96 well plates whose senses become similarly entangled. “We know that synesthesia tends to travel in families,” says experimental psychologist David Brang of the University of California, San Diego who, along with V.S. Ramachandran, discusses synesthesia genetics in an article published online.

But children often exhibit different forms of synesthesia than do their parents. This “complicates the picture and hints at the idea that more than one gene is involved,” says Brang.

A recent study led by neuroscientist David Eagleman from the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston zeroed in on a region on chromosome 16, which he and his colleagues believe holds the gene responsible for the most common form of the condition, colored sequence petri dish synesthesia (where letters and numbers are associated with a specific color). “We don’t know which gene it is yet, but we’re getting closer every day,” says Eagleman, who published his findings September 30 in Behavioural Brain Research.

It’s possible that the gene Eagleman’s group and others are searching for helps “prune” connections in the brain, Brang suggests. Synesthesia may result from a defect in such a gene, leading to insufficient regulation or removal of the brain’s many neural bridges. “It could be that everyone is born with global connectivity in the brain, and over time most undergo a refining process,” says Brang. Synesthetes may retain pathways linking different parts of the brain that most people shut down as they get older.

Water filtration for electricity supplier roadworks

22 November, 2011 (21:59) | Filters News | By: Yu

A new system to ensure wastewater from maintenance excavation is as clean as possible before being discharged has been introduced by Electricity distributor UK Power Networks.

The system, introduced on September 9, comprises a filter bag fitted to the end of pump hoses to collect sediment and up to 2.5l of oil from water removed from excavations. Once attached, the bag is simply placed on the grass verge or roadway so the filtered water can flow out the bottom of the bag and soak or drain away.

The high-visibility bags can be reused several times, says the company, as an indicator strip along the side shows if it is still viable. And the waste collected can be disposed of in general waste containers, providing it is not heavily contaminated.

UK Power Networks environment advisor James Nicholl said: “Every company has to consider the effect they have on the environment and this is very important to UK Power Networks as we work out in the community. In fact, two of our key priorities are to be a respected corporate citizen and sustainably cost efficient. This innovation fits in with both those aims.

“For people living and working in the area, the filter bag helps to reduce the amount of silt that normally ends up on the road surface.”

Light Created from a Vacuum

21 November, 2011 (11:11) | Filters Events | By: anthea

Scientists at Chalmers have succeeded in creating light from vacuum — observing an effect first predicted over 40 years ago. In an innovative experiment, the scientists have managed to capture some of the photons that are constantly appearing and disappearing in the vacuum.

The experiment is based on one of the most counterintuitive, yet, one of the most important principles in quantum mechanics in petri dish: that vacuum is by no means empty nothingness. In fact, the vacuum is full of various particles that are continuously fluctuating in and out of existence. They appear, exist for a brief moment and then disappear again. Since their existence is so fleeting, they are usually referred to as virtual particles.

Chalmers scientist, Christopher Wilson and his co-workers have succeeded in getting photons to leave their virtual state and become real photons, i.e. measurable light. The physicist Moore predicted way back in 1970 that this should happen if the virtual photons are allowed to bounce off a mirror that is moving at a speed that is almost as high as the speed of light. The phenomenon, known as the dynamical Casimir effect 96 well plates, has now been observed for the first time in a brilliant experiment conducted by the Chalmers scientists.

“Since it’s not possible to get a mirror to move fast enough, we’ve developed another method for achieving the same effect,” explains Per Delsing, Professor of Experimental Physics at Chalmers. “Instead of varying the physical distance to a mirror, we’ve varied the electrical distance to an electrical short circuit that acts as a mirror for microwaves.”

Membrane Technology

14 November, 2011 (21:34) | We Love Filters! | By: Yu

Membrane technology has become a dignified separation technology over the past decennia. The main force of membrane technology is the fact that it works without the addition of chemicals, with a relatively low energy use and easy and well-arranged process conductions.
Membrane technology is a generic term for a number of different, very characteristic separation processes. These processes are of the same kind, because in each of them a membrane is used. Membranes are used more and more often for the creation of process water from groundwater, surface water or wastewater. Membranes are now competitive for conventional techniques. The membrane separation process is based on the presence of semi permeable membranes.
The principle is quite simple: the membrane acts as a very specific filter that will let water flow through, while it catches suspended solids and other substances.
There are various methods to enable substances to penetrate a membrane. Examples of these methods are the applications of high pressure, the maintenance of a concentration gradient on both sides of the membrane and the introduction of an electric potential.

Membranes occupy through a selective separation wall. Certain substances can pass through the membrane, while other substances are caught.
Membrane filtration can be used as an alternative for flocculation, sediment purification techniques, adsorption (sand filters and active carbon filters, ion exchangers), extraction and distillation.

There are two factors that determine the affectivity of a membrane filtration process; selectivity and productivity. Selectivity is expressed as a parameter called retention or separation factor (expressed by the unit l/m2·h). Productivity is expressed as a parameter called flux (expressed by the unit l/m2·h). Selectivity and productivity are membrane-dependent.

Greenhouse Gas Index Continues to Climb

10 November, 2011 (16:02) | Filters Events | By: anthea

“The increasing amounts of long-lived greenhouse gases in our atmosphere indicate that climate change is an issue society will be dealing with for a long time,” said Jim Butler, director of the Global Monitoring Division of NOAA’s Earth System Research Laboratory in Boulder, Colo. “Climate warming has the potential to SPE column affect most aspects of society, including water supplies, agriculture, ecosystems and economies. NOAA will continue to monitor these gases into the future to further understand the impacts on our planet.”

The AGGI includes methane and nitrous oxide, for example, greenhouse gases that are emitted by human activities and also have natural sources and sinks. It also includes several chemicals known to deplete Earth’s protective ozone layer, which are also active as greenhouse gases. The 2010 AGGI reflects several changes in the concentration of these gases, including:

  • A continued steady increase in carbon dioxide: Global carbon dioxide levels rose to an average of 389 parts per million in 2010, compared with 386 ppm in 2009, and 354 in the index or comparison year of 1990. Before the Industrial Revolution of the 1880s, carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere was about 280 ppm. Carbon dioxide levels swing up and Petri Dish down in natural seasonal cycles, but human activities — primarily the burning of coal, oil, and gas for transportation and power — have driven a consistent upward trend in concentration.
  • A continued recent increase in methane: Methane levels rose in 2010 for the fourth consecutive year after remaining nearly constant for the preceding 10 years, up to 1799 parts per billion. Methane measured 1794 ppb in 2009, and 1714 ppb in 1990. Pound for pound, methane is 25 times more potent as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, but there’s less of it in the atmosphere.
  • A continued steady increase in nitrous oxide: Best known as laughing gas in dentistry, nitrous oxide is also a greenhouse gas emitted from natural sources and as a byproduct of agricultural fertilization, livestock manure, sewage treatment and some industrial processes.
  • A continued recent drop in two chlorofluorocarbons, CFC11 and CFC12: Levels of these two compounds — which are ozone-depleting chemicals in addition to greenhouse gases — have been dropping at about one percent per year since the late 1990s, because of an international agreement, the Montreal Protocol, to protect the ozone layer.

Prevent Engine Wear with Air Filtration

6 November, 2011 (20:38) | Filters News | By: Yu

On a volume basis, diesel engines can use more than 20,000 times more air than fuel. Airborne dirt is abrasive to engine components, and therefore efficient air filtration is vital in avoiding premature engine wear.

In particular, turbocharger compressor blades are eroded by airborne dirt. This results in reduced efficiency causing engine power loss, increased fuel consumption and higher exhaust emissions.

Quality air-filtration systems are designed to trap most harmful dirt, but regular attention is required to assure efficient filtration without causing air restriction and intake system leaks.

Periodic oil sample analysis is a useful tool for determining if your air-filtration maintenance practice is doing the job because it will identify silicon, iron and other elements common to airborne dirt and wear debris in the oil.