← All reports

A cheaper and reusable method using pH-controlled traps has been developed to remove 'forever chemicals' from drinking water.

ScienceEnvironmentWater TreatmentApr 19, 2026score 0.272 posts · 0 replies across 2 instances
The thread discusses a new method developed by Florida International University scientists to remove 'forever chemicals' from drinking water using pH-controlled traps, which is described as a cheaper and reusable solution. The post highlights the environmental and health implications of these persistent chemicals and introduces a potential solution.

Claims

A cheaper and reusable method using pH-controlled traps has been developed to remove 'forever chemicals' from drinking water.
Parent: Environmental ScienceEntity: Forever chemicals removalImpact: positiveDate: Apr 19, 2026 - Apr 20, 2026Target: A cheaper and reusable method using pH-controlled traps has been developed to remove 'forever chemicals' from drinking water.

Source posts

@[email protected]
A cheaper way to fight 'forever chemicals': How pH-controlled traps could clean drinking water https://phys.org/news/2026-04-cheaper-chemicals-ph.html
1 boosts · 0 favs · 0 replies · Apr 20, 2026
@[email protected]
A cheaper way to fight 'forever chemicals': How pH-controlled traps could clean drinking water phys.org/news/2026-04-cheaper-chemicals-ph.html Forever chemicals don't break down and don't disappear, but Florida International University scientists have developed a safer, cheaper, and reusable solution that could remove these chemicals. FIU chemistry professor Kevin O'Shea and chemistry Ph.D.…
0 boosts · 0 favs · 0 replies · Apr 19, 2026
@[email protected]
A cheaper way to fight 'forever chemicals': How pH-controlled traps could clean drinking water https://phys.org/news/2026-04-cheaper-chemicals-ph.html?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub Posted into Environment @environment-kevinbeachus9
0 boosts · 0 favs · 0 replies · Apr 20, 2026