SOURCE:GOOGLE SCIENCE PROJECTS
link:Google Science Fair
Odisha
School Girl Wins Award At Google Science Fair For Developing Water Purifying
Agent
Lalita Prasida Sripada Srisai, a
13-year-old student of class 9th in DPS Damanjodi in Koraputdistrict of
Odisha, has made India proud by winning the ‘Community Impact Award’ at the
prestigious Google Science Fair in California on Tuesday. Winning the award in
the 13-15 years age group, she received 10, 000 USD as the prize MONEY She is
also set to be supported by Google for a year to build her project.
Lalita developed a low cost
bio-absorbent based water purifier. It functions mainly on waste corn cobs. The
Corn cob is the least utilized part of the maize plant. It is a very important
agricultural waste. Having high mechanical strength, rigidity and porosity,
corn cob is a suitable absorbent. This enables contaminants like oxides of
salts, detergent, suspended particles, coloured dyes,oil and grease to be absorbed in the
surface of the corn cobs. Some of the heavy metals are also absorbed.
“If the drain pipe of the household is
connected to a chamber having different layers of corn cobs in partition layers
or to an S-trap pipe having corn cobs, it will separate about more than 70-80 %
of contaminants including suspended particles from the waste water,” says the
report published about her project on the Google Science
Fair website.
This cheap and eco-friendly way of
purifying water will open up a new market for corn corbs which are otherwise
discarded as bio-waste.
To conduct the experiment, Lalita had collected the cobs from a nearby farm and sun dried them for a month. To make a hole at the centre of one cob, the pith was removed. In it 50 ml of domestic effluent collected from a kitchen drain pipe was poured. This was allowed to pass through the hole. Thereafter, the collected filtrate was tested for purity. This was the pilot stage.
To conduct the experiment, Lalita had collected the cobs from a nearby farm and sun dried them for a month. To make a hole at the centre of one cob, the pith was removed. In it 50 ml of domestic effluent collected from a kitchen drain pipe was poured. This was allowed to pass through the hole. Thereafter, the collected filtrate was tested for purity. This was the pilot stage.
After its successful completion, water
with several added chemical impurities was through five bottles, each
containing a different layer for purification. The layers had long pieces of
corn cobs, small pieces of corn cobs, powdered corn cobs, activated charcoal
made from corn cobs and fine sand.
The charcoal layer was
observed to absorb most of the coloured substances present in the water, while
the chaff layers of both long and small pieces of corn cobs absorbed the
suspended particles. The powdered corn cob layer absorbed the gasoline waste.
Lalita’s teacher, Pallabi Mahapatro,
claims that the technique can be used for immobilizing the contaminants in
domestic and industrial effluents, and in ponds, reservoirs and water tanks.
For the time being, Lalita’s peers and
staff at her school have been celebrating this grand victory while many are
congratulating her on social media.
The Principal of DPS Damanjodi, Trinath
Prasad Padhi, reveals that Lalita is also very proficient in co-curricular
activities like song and dance. She is set to receive a grand welcome on her
return to school through a major function.
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