Venkat Viswanathan, assistant professor at the Carnegie Mellon University in US, along with colleagues designed a conceptual device which would combine with unsanitary water and sunlight to create a potable water source.
"Theoretically, you would dip a stick of this material in a bucket of water, take it outside, and it would absorb sunlight," said Viswanathan.
"What we are doing, essentially, is using the energy of the Sun to excite or oxidise water into a compound that has the potency to clean," he said.
Tin oxide and titanium dioxide are very stable compounds. In other words, they do not like to bond; hardly any chemicals stick to them.
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That property of binding so weakly to other compounds causes the formation of hydrogen peroxide. Using energy from the solar photons, tin oxide and titanium oxide oxidise the water molecule (H2O) to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2).
Then, once the hydrogen peroxide has eliminated all of the water's bacteria and organic pollutants, the device would self-shut down - when it runs out of things to clean, hydrogen peroxide is unstable in water.
It is predicted that about 3 billion people would not have access to clean drinking water by 2020, Viswanathan said, but he is hopeful that the device, when it is eventually prototyped and released, will bring that number down.