Ariza Chem
Ariza Chem
Ariza Chem
SUBMITTED BY
ARIZA PATEL
Class – 12th ‘B’
Roll No. -
INDEX
1. Certificate of Authenticity
2. Acknowledgement
3. Introduction
-Need of Water
-Purification of Water
-Need for a stable purification technique
4. Theory
-History of Water purification
-Bleaching powder and its preparation
-Use of Bleaching powder in Sterilization of water
5. Experiment
-Aim
-Pre-Requisite Knowledge
-Requirements
-Procedure
6. Result
7. Bibliography
CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that Ariza Patel of class XII-B of GVN The Global
School, has completed her project under my supervision, during the
academic year 2022-23. She has taken proper care and shown
utmost sincerity in the completion of this project.
_____________________ _____________________
Maninder Bhatia Ma’am Anusha Sharma Ma’am
Principal Head of Chemistry Department
GVN-The Global School GVN- The Global School
_____________________
Examiner
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Purification of Water
There are many methods for the purification of water. Some of them
are:-
1. Boiling
2. Filtration
3. Bleaching powder treatment
4. SODIS (Solar Water Disinfection) And the list goes on....
Boiling is perhaps the most commonly used water purification
technique in use today. While in normal households it is an
efficient technique; it cannot be used for industrial and large scale
purposes. It is because in normal households, the water to be
purified is very small in quantity and hence the water loss due to
evaporation is almost negligible. But in Industrial or large scale
purification of water the water loss due to evaporation will be
quite high and the amount of purified water obtained will be very
less.
THEORY
History of water purification in different parts of the world.
In 1854 it was discovered that a cholera epidemic spread through
water. The outbreak seemed less severe in areas where sand
filters were installed. British scientist John Snow found that the
direct cause of the outbreak was water pump contamination by
sewage water. He applied chlorine to purify the water, and this
paved the way for water disinfection. Since the water in the pump
had tasted and smelled normal, the conclusion was finally drawn
that good taste and smell alone do not guarantee safe drinking
water. This discovery led to governments starting to install
municipal water filters (sand filters and chlorination), and hence
the first government regulation of public water.
In the 1890s America started building large sand filters to protect
public health. These turned out to be a success. Instead of slow
sand filtration, rapid sand
filtration was now applied. Filter
capacity was improved by cleaning
it with powerful jet steam.
Subsequently, Dr. Fuller found
that rapid sand filtration worked
much better when it was
preceded by coagulation and
sedimentation techniques.
Meanwhile, such waterborne
illnesses as cholera and typhoid became less and less common as
water chlorination won terrain throughout the world.
But the victory obtained by the invention of chlorination did not
last long. After some time the negative effects of this element
were discovered. Chlorine vaporizes much faster than water, and
it was linked to the aggravation and cause of respiratory disease.
Water experts started looking
for alternative water
disinfectants. In 1902 calcium
hypo chlorite and ferric chloride
were mixed in a drinking water
supply in Belgium, resulting in
both coagulation and
disinfection.
The treatment and distribution of water for safe use is one of the
greatest achievements of the twentieth century. Before cities
began routinely treating drinking water with chlorine (starting
with Chicago and Jersey City in US in 1908), cholera, typhoid fever,
dysentery and hepatitis A killed thousands of U.S. residents
annually. Drinking water chlorination and filtration have helped to
virtually eliminate these diseases in the U.S. and other developed
countries. Meeting the goal of clean, safe drinking water requires
a multi-barrier approach that includes: protecting source water
from contamination, appropriately treating raw water, and
ensuring safe distribution of treated water to consumers' taps.
During the treatment process, chlorine is added to drinking water
as elemental chlorine (chlorine gas), sodium hypochlorite solution
or dry calcium hypochlorite. When applied to water, each of these
forms "free chlorine," which destroys pathogenic (disease-
causing) organisms.
Almost all systems that disinfect their water use some type of
chlorine-based process, either alone or in combination with other
disinfectants. In addition to controlling disease-causing organisms,
chlorination offers a number of benefits including:
• Reduces many disagreeable tastes and odors;
• Eliminates slime bacteria, molds and algae that commonly
grow in water supply reservoirs, on the walls of water mains
and in storage tanks;
• Removes chemical compounds that have unpleasant tastes
and hinder disinfection; and
• Helps remove iron and manganese from raw water.
As importantly, only chlorine-based chemicals provide "residual
disinfectant" levels that prevent microbial re-growth and help
protect treated water throughout the distribution system.
For more than a century, the safety of drinking water supplies has
been greatly improved by the addition of bleaching powder.
Disinfecting our drinking water ensures it is free of the
microorganisms that can cause serious and life-threatening
diseases, such as cholera and typhoid fever. To this day, bleaching
powder remains the most commonly used drinking water
disinfectant, and the disinfectant for which we have the most
scientific information.
RESULT
Amount of the given sample of bleaching powder required to
disinfect one litre of water
Sample I =........... g
Sample II=........... g
Sample III=........... g
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1.The Medical front-"Water Supply"
http://www.vlib.us/medical/sancamp/water.htm
2. "Chemistry Projects" http://www.icbse.com
3.How to live on Very,Very Little-"Clean drinking water: How to
develop low cost sources of drinking water just about anywhere"
http://www.jmooneyham.com/watp.html
4.Calcium Hypochloride
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bleaching_powder
5.Water Treatment
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_treatment
6.Bleach http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bleach
7.Drinking Water Treatment:Continuous Chlorination
http://www.ianrpubs.unl.edu/epublic/pages/publicationD.jsp?pu
blicationId=358
8.Chlorination of Drinking Water http://www.water-
research.net/watertreatment/chlorination.htm
9.Chlorination Of Drinking Water (2)
www.edstrom.com/doclib/mi4174.pdf
10.Wagenet, L, K. Mancl, and M. Sailus, 1995. "Home Water
Treatment," Northeast Regional Agricultural Engineering Service,
Cooperative Extension, Ithaca, N.Y.
11."Treatment Systems for Household Water Supplies:
Chlorination," North Dakota State University Extension Service
12."Water Treatment Notes: Chlorination of Drinking Water,"
Cornell Cooperative Extension, New York State College of Human
Ecology,USA
13."Drinking Water Standards," www.epa.gov/safewater/mcl.html
14."Understanding the New Consumer Confidence Report,"
www.awwa.org/Advocacy/bluethumb98/consumer.cfm
15."Testing for Drinking Water Quality," NebGuide G89-907
Cooperative Extension, Institute of Agriculture and Natural
Resources, University of Nebraska-Lincoln,USA
16.DISINFECTING YOUR WELL WATER: SHOCK CHLORINATION
http://www.fcs.uga.edu/pubs/PDF/HACE-858-4.pdf
17. Source: https://www.icbse.com
THANK YOU!