How to Make a Coffee-Clay Water Filter

From Howtopedia - english
Revision as of 22:54, 29 October 2007 by 81.221.88.254 (talk)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Water-borne, diarrhoea-causing bacteria, such as E. coli, kill 1.6 million people every year.

a cheap and simple water filter that Anyone can make Anywhere.

Those filters are made from clay because it's easy to use and most importantly... it's free.

But fired clay alone is too dense to let the water pass at a desirable pace. Therefore some organic material is being added to increase the porousity: Organic material - like used coffee grounds, grounded rice husk, tea leaves or straw... - will would burn up in the firing process and leave tiny holes in the clay.

Clay and Grounded coffee are materials widely available around the world.

  • Mix equal parts: One handful of clay, one handful of coffee grounds, for exemple from a collecting bin at the local coffee shop. Mix with enough water to form a thick biscuit like paste and form a cylindrical recipient with this paste
  • Leave it in the sun to dry.
  • fire the clay with cow manure: a dung fire burns at around 950 degrees C - just the right temperature for firing clay.

It takes about an hour of baking in the dung to fire the filter

the bacteria are slightly bigger than the pores of clay and get trapped in the clay. The coffee increases the porosity and the contact surface of the clay.
Lab tests showed that the clay and coffee combination works well: It takes one to two hours to filter one litre of water, and the coffee-clay filter removes up to 99.8 percent of bacteria in water.


Tony Flynn
PhD Student, Department of Engineering Australian National University
http://info.anu.edu.au