Reverse Osmosis
We call it the Pure Pouch for one reason – “Purity”
To understand "reverse osmosis," it is
probably best to start with normal osmosis. According to Merriam-Webster's
Collegiate Dictionary, osmosis is the "movement of a solvent
through a semipermeable membrane (as of a living cell) into a solution of
higher solute concentration that tends to equalize the concentrations of solute
on the two sides of the membrane." That's a mouthful. To understand what
it means, this picture is helpful:

On the left is a beaker filled with water, and a tube has been
half-submerged in the water. As you would expect, the water level in the tube
is the same as the water level in the beaker. In the middle figure, the end of
the tube has been sealed with a "semipermeable membrane" and the tube
has been half-filled with a salty solution and submerged. Initially, the level
of the salt solution and the water are equal, but over time, something
unexpected happens -- the water in the tube actually rises. The rise is
attributed to "osmotic pressure."
A semipermeable membrane is a membrane that will pass some
atoms
or molecules but not others. Saran wrap is a membrane, but it is impermeable to
almost everything we commonly throw at it. The best common example of a
semipermeable membrane would be the lining of your intestines, or a cell wall.
Gore-tex is another common semipermeable membrane. Gore-tex fabric contains an
extremely thin plastic film into which billions of small pores have been
cut. The pores are big enough to let water vapor through, but small enough to
prevent liquid water from passing (see
this page
for more information on Gore-tex fabric).
In the figure above, the membrane allows passage of water molecules but not salt molecules.
One way to understand osmotic pressure would be to think of the water
molecules on both sides of the membrane. They are in constant
Brownian motion.
On the salty side, some of the pores get plugged with salt atoms, but on the pure-water side that does not
happen. Therefore, more water passes from the pure-water side to the salty
side, as there are more pores on the pure-water side for the water molecules to
pass through. The water on the salty side rises until one of two things occurs:
- The salt concentration becomes the same on both
sides of the membrane (which isn't going to happen in this case since
there is pure water on one side and salty water on the other).
- The water pressure rises as the height of the
column of salty water rises, until it is equal to the osmotic pressure. At
that point, osmosis will stop.
Osmosis, by the way, is why drinking salty water (like ocean water) will kill you. When you put
salty water in your stomach, osmotic pressure begins drawing water out of your
body to try to dilute the salt in your stomach. Eventually, you dehydrate and die.
In reverse osmosis, the idea is to use the membrane to act like an extremely fine filter
to create drinkable water from salty (or otherwise contaminated) water. The
salty water is put on one side of the membrane and pressure is applied to stop,
and then reverse, the osmotic process. It generally takes a lot of pressure and
is fairly slow, but it works.
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