First Uses of New Solar Energy Technology: Killing Germs On Medical, Dental Instruments
Sep. 9, 2013 — A
revolutionary new solar energy technology that turns water into steam
without boiling the entire container of water has become the basis for
new devices to sanitize medical and dental instruments and human waste
in developing countries, scientists said.
A “solar
autoclave” can sterilize medical instruments and wastes without using
electricity. (Credit: Oara Neumann, Rice University)
Prototypes of the devices, which need no electricity or fuel, were
the topic of one of the keynote addresses at the opening of the 246th
National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society
(ACS).
Naomi Halas, D.Sc., pointed out that almost 2 billion people live in
areas of the world without a regular supply of electricity. That
electricity is key to using machines called autoclaves, which produce
scorching-hot steam to sterilize medical and dental instruments. Without
that basic machine, doctors must rely on chemicals, which can be costly
and difficult to transport, to prevent the spread of germs and disease
from medical and dental instruments.
"We have developed a solution, our solar steam technology," Halas
said. She is with Rice University. "It is completely off-grid, uses
sunlight as the energy source, is not that large, kills disease-causing
microbes effectively and relatively quickly and is easy to operate. This
is an incredibly promising technology."
Halas and colleagues have prototypes of two solar steam machines. One
is the autoclave for sterilizing medical and dental instruments. The
second is an autoclave for disinfecting human and animal wastes, which
are another major source of disease transmission in developing countries
and other resource-limited areas. The technology could be expanded to
provide steam for direct use in purifying dirty or salty water for
drinking and cooking -- with the solar-generated steam simply allowed to
condense into pure distilled water. Possibilities also exist for
adapting the technology to produce steam to spin small electric turbines
to generate electricity.
Their tests showed that the prototype autoclaves produced steam at
temperatures ranging from 239 to 270 degrees Fahrenheit. Steam
production adequate for sterilization began within about 5 minutes. It
continued for periods of time long enough to sterilize liquid and solid
materials placed inside the device, consistent with U.S. Food and Drug
Administration sterilization guidelines. The heat and pressure produced
by the steam was great enough to kill the most heat-resistant living
microbes, and also viruses and the tough spores that microbes form to
survive hostile environmental conditions.
The autoclaves are the first practical applications of a new solar energy technology described earlier in 2012 in ACS Nano,
one of the ACS' more than 40 peer-reviewed scientific journals.
Metallic nanoparticles -- bits of material so small that hundreds would
fit inside the period at the end of this sentence -- go into a container
of water. Sunlight focused into the water quickly heats the
nanoparticles, which scientists are terming "nanoheaters." A layer of
steam forms on the nanoheaters and buoys them up to the water's surface.
They release the steam and sink back down into the water to repeat the
process.
"Nanoheaters generate steam at a remarkably high efficiency," Halas
said. "More than 80 percent of the energy they absorb from sunlight goes
into production of steam. In the conventional production of steam, you
would have to heat the entire container of water until it boils, with
the bubbles rising to the top to release steam. With nanoheaters, less
than 20 percent of the energy heats the neighboring liquid."
The prototype autoclaves consist of a dish-like mirror that focuses sunlight into a container of water with the nanoheaters.
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