(eli5) How is water treated and what does it mean when a water bottle says “purified by reverse osmosis” ?

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(eli5) How is water treated and what does it mean when a water bottle says “purified by reverse osmosis” ?

In: Chemistry

3 Answers

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Soluble(mixable) solutions try to even out their distribution if allowed to mix. So if you poured pure water into a cup of equal amount of salt, it won’t stay pure water on top and salt on bottom, it’ll mix until it’s evenly 50/50 water/salt (assuming it stays heated enough to keep crystals from forming, but we’ll not get into that.)

The same remains true if they are mixing through a semipermeable (lets some things through but blocks others) membrane. The water will try to move into the side of the membrane with less salt unless blocked by the membrane, *even if* it results in increased pressure on one side of the membrane. That’s osmosis.

The analogy I use is a tank with a glass wall. On one side of the wall are big fish, on the other side are small fish. The big fish don’t care about the small fish, they only want to spread out from each other. The same is true about the small fish, they only want to spread out until each is more or less equal distant from each other. The glass wall is replaced with a net that allows small fish through but blocks the big fish (semipermeable). A portion of the small fish move into the side with the big fish until they are equal distant from each other again, *even if* this means overcrowding that side of the tank a bit (increases pressure). They just want to spread out.

Reverse osmosis is kinda the opposite. So much pressure is put on a semipermeable membrane that it forces that which can pass through it to the other side while blocking that which can’t pass through it. Honestly I think a filter is a more accurate way to say it. To go back to my earlier analogy, A mix of big fish and small fish is squeezed against the net. The only thing that pops out the other side of the net are small fish (purified water).

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