Ultrasound solution to toxin pollution.Blooms of algae algae (ăl`jē) [plural of Lat. alga=seaweed], a large and diverse group of primarily aquatic plantlike organisms. These organisms were previously classified as a primitive subkingdom of the plant kingdom, the thallophytes (plants that that produce life-threatening toxins regularly plague water supplies around the world. In many eases, the algae's toxins can survive standard treatments for purifying pu·ri·fy v. pu·ri·fied, pu·ri·fy·ing, pu·ri·fies v.tr. 1. To rid of impurities; cleanse. 2. To rid of foreign or objectionable elements. 3. water. Researchers at Florida International University Florida International University, primarily at University Park, Miami; coeducational; chartered 1965, opened 1972. A research university, it has 18 colleges and schools and many specialized centers and institutes, including those in biomedical engineering, database in Miami think they have a sound solution: ultrasound. Blasting water with 640-kilohertz ultrasound waves Ultrasound waves High frequency sound waves. Mentioned in: Endorectal Ultrasound briefly creates high-pressure microenvironments as hot as 3,700[degrees]C, which breaks some water molecules into reactive fragments that can kill the algae. Chemist Kevin E. O'Shea and his colleagues in an upcoming Environmental Science U Technology, describe tests with a toxin produced by Microcystis aeruginosa, a blue-green alga blue-green alga n. See cyanobacterium. blue-green alga See under cyanobacterium. found in Florida and elsewhere. People have died from exposure to such toxins. The researchers prepared solutions of the toxin at concentrations higher than those that build up in water supplies. Six-minute treatments with ultrasound destroyed some 90 percent of the M. aeruginosa toxin in the samples. That brought its concentration to safe levels and produced no identifiable toxicity, notes O'Shea. The data indicate that the technique could destroy "a wide variety of other toxins," he says, including brevetoxins shed into the sea by infamous red-tide algae (see page 56).--J.R. |
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