Water treatment Applications

Filtration systems of all shapes and sizes make use of pressure and a media or membrane to segregate out materials from a fluid such as water. The materials in the fluid are typically bound to the fluid at the molecular level. Pressure is used to break these bonds and to force the fluid to flow through the filter and beyond. The filter serves to break bonds and segregate material. As the material builds up on the filter the flow rate of the filter goes down. If the pressure is not increased at some point, the filter will require cleaning or replacement. In situations where there is an automatic backwash system, the system would go through a cleaning process intended to restore the filter to a higher flow rate. Reverse osmosis systems have two streams of water in them. The cleaned water that goes through the membrane is called permeate or product stream. The concentrate stream is an ongoing flow of water that moves across each membrane which is serving a cleaning function that carries away the particulate left behind on the membrane surface.
The Inline Processor technology is an in-line electrochemical process, which alters the charge properties of fluids, gasses and organic matter. Inline Processors are designed to effectively strip electrons from flowing fluids without use of chemicals, electricity or operators physical adjustment. It just sits in place, in-line with your water source, cleanly operating for years. This process enables water to lose its ability to bond itself to other foreign matter. The water remains in a positively charged state until such time that it regains enough electrons to restore its former balance-charge state and bonding nature. Our Processed water flows more easily through permeable and semi-permeable materials, including filters which reduces back pressure and lowers energy costs while increasing the quality and quantity of the product water.
The performance and efficiency of any filtration system is increased when an Inline Processor is used to pre-treat the fluid being filtered. The bonds between both the fluid and contaminates are broken reducing one of the functions of a filter.
Stripping the electrons from the fluid causes it to temporarily loss its ability to bond to itself and to anything else including the filter media or membrane. Filters that remove particulate down to the micron sizes have extended filter life due to the elimination of bio-fouling and reduction of back pressure on the filter surface caused by the typical bond breaking process.
The process produces another concurrent benefit: Waterborne microorganisms do not survive the process. Live microorganisms, ie: Giardia Lamblia, Cryptosporida, E Coli Types, spore formers etc. entering our system, exit having been inactivated/killed by the process of stripping electrons from all sources within and from the flowing water. Studying the process, samples have proposed two possible causes for this effect:
1. The electron stripping process destroys the microorganisms DNA.
2. The electron transport and exchange mechanism of the microorganism becomes destroyed.
Our Process inactivates/kills microorganisms without the use of chemical or outside power source and simply eliminates all costs, risks and by-products normally associated with chemical disinfectant or algaecide use.