News: 0158030979

  ARM Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life (Terry Pratchett, Jingo)

Kombucha Cultures Make Excellent Sustainable Water Filters, Study Finds (arstechnica.com)

(Tuesday January 25, 2022 @10:30PM (BeauHD) from the natural-and-effective dept.)


Long-time Slashdot reader [1]shoor shares a report from Ars Technica:

> The refreshing kombucha tea that's all the rage these days among certain global demographics [2]might also hold the key to affordable, environmentally sustainable living membranes for water filtration , according to [3]a recent paper published in the American Chemical Society journal ACS ES&T Water. Experiments by researchers at Montana Technological University (MTU) and Arizona State University (ASU) showed that membranes grown from kombucha cultures were better at preventing the formation of biofilms -- a significant challenge in water filtration -- than current commercial membranes.

>

> Co-author Katherine Zodrow, an environmental engineer at MTU, led an earlier 2020 study demonstrating the feasibility of making sustainable living filtration membranes (LFMs) out of a bacterial cellulose network and the native microorganisms of a kombucha SCOBY (symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast) culture. Zodrow and her new collaborators made their membranes for this latest round of experiments the same way: by placing a SCOBY in a growth solution of sugar, black tea, and distilled white vinegar dissolved in deionized water. The researchers then placed the mixture in a temperature-controlled room for 10-12 days until a thick membrane formed on the mixture's surface. The grown membranes were stored in deionized water and used in experiments within eight days. The 20 liters of raw water samples for the experiments were taken from the three drinking water treatment plants in Butte, Montana: Basin Creek Reservoir, Moulton Reservoir, and Big Hole River. The water samples were then pretreated in accordance with standard practices at each plant.

>

> Both the LFMs and polymer-based filters, the researchers discovered, became clogged over time, causing them to flow and filter more slowly. The LFMs used in the experiments, however, showed between 19 and 40 percent better performance than their commercial counterparts on that score. The SCOBY-based LFMs were also more resistant to befouling. While biofilms eventually formed, fewer microorganisms were found in those films. Zodrow et al. sequenced the DNA of any bacteria and fungi in the SCOBY-based membrane and found that 97 percent of the bacteria present belonged to the genus Acetobacter. This is not surprising, since it's also the dominant bacteria in kombucha, but it may explain why the LFMs performed so well with regard to biofilms. As the name implies, a defining characteristic of this genus is the ability to oxidize organic carbon sources like sucrose, glucose, and ethanol into acetic acid, which is known for its antimicrobial properties. Acetobacter has also been shown to reduce or even remove biofilms, in keeping with the results of Zodrow et al.'s experiments.



[1] https://slashdot.org/~shoor

[2] https://arstechnica.com/science/2022/01/kombucha-cultures-make-excellent-sustainable-water-filters-study-finds/

[3] https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsestwater.1c00169



Next obvious step (Score:2)

by skogs ( 628589 )

Now they can test adding the komucha bacteria film to the face of the other filter screens.

Vinegar pee water? (Score:3)

by Daemonik ( 171801 )

Gee, what interesting flavors of tap water will we have to look forward to in the future!?

Save water... (Score:2)

by Albinoman ( 584294 )

and quit producing that nasty shit. Somebody was drinking vinegar and decided they could trick others into it by renaming it.

Sounds fine, but ... (Score:2)

by PPH ( 736903 )

... what would we do about that one horrible side effect? The proliferation of kombucha tea.

Step in the right direction. (Score:2)

by Gravis Zero ( 934156 )

Most of the time we see tasks like this as a mechanical engineering or a chemistry problem. However, there are severe limits on our the materials we use and how they are formed. Using biology (natural or engineered) to solve these types of small problems is a step toward a superior solution. I certainly hope our advances in genetic editing will be used to augment more biology into our engineered systems so that we can take advantage of nature's amazing ability to construction small and sophisticated stru

A true artist will let his wife starve, his children go barefoot, his mother
drudge for his living at seventy, sooner than work at anything but his art.
-- Shaw