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Reverse Osmosis Pure Water Systems
Our "Blue Planet" consists of 70% water. But did you know that approximately 97% of them are saltwater, and for us as a people are not suitable for drinking water? Only 0.65%, fresh water can be drunk by humans. This is freshwater but also for many other area used as for agriculture, industry, etc. and also polluted.

According to the United Nations in 2025 approximately 2 / 3 of the world's population no longer clean drinking water available, because today about 2 million tons of waste daily into our lakes and rivers reach.

Now you protect your wichtisges food, water, with our selected products.
 

What Is. . . Reverse Osmosis


 

High pressure industrial units typically provide from 10 gallons to thousands of gallons per day of water with an efficiency of 1-9 gallons of reject water per gallon of treated water. Water purity can be as high as 95 percent. These systems tend to be larger and more complicated than low pressure systems, and this is reflected in their costs, which range from US $1000 through tens of thousands of dollars for a large, multi-module unit capable of providing desalinated drinking water for a resort facility or water bottling plant.  

 

What Reverse Osmosis Treats

Reverse osmosis can treat for a wide variety of health and aesthetic contaminants. Effectively designed, RO equipment can treat for a wide variety of aesthetic contaminants that cause unpleasant taste, color, and odor problems like a salty or soda taste caused by chlorides or sulfates. 

RO can also be effective for treating health contaminants like arsenic, asbestos, atrazine (herbicides/pesticides). fluoride, lead, mercury, nitrate, and radium. When using appropriate carbon prefiltering (commonly included with most RO systems), additional treatment can also be provided for such "volatile" contaminants as benzene, trichloroethylene, trihalomethanes, and radon. Some RO equipment is also capable of treating for biological contaminants like Cryptosporidium. The Water Quality Association (WQA) cautions, however, that while RO membranes typically remove virtually all known microorganisms and most other health contaminants, design consderations may prevent a unit from offering foolproof protection when incorporated into a consumer drinking water system. 

When looking for a product to treat for a given health contaminant, care should be used to find products that have been tested successfully for such purposes at a quality testing laboratory.  

 

Conclusion

Reverse osmosis is a relatively new, but very effective, application of an established scientific process. Whether it is used to meet the needs of a typical family of four, or the needs of an industrial operation requiring thousands of gallons per day, it can be a cost effective to provide the required quantity of highly treated water. With continual advances in system and membrane design that boost efficiency and reliability, RO can be expected to play a major role in water treatment for years to come.  

Aesthetic Water Quality Problems 



Reverse Osmosis Pure Water Systems
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