HOUSEHOLD DEFLUORIDATION UNIT DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT

Authors

  • Belay Woldeyes
  • Nurelegne Tefera
  • Lemma Dendena

Abstract

ABSTRACT
The 1984 World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines suggest the permissible jluoride concentration in drinking water to be l. 0 mg/l in
warm climate and 1. 2 mg/! in cooler areas. Excessive jluoride intake causes an irreversible health problem widely known as jluorosis. There
are three stages ofjluorisis' Dental, skeletal and crippling jluorosis and all of them are known to prevail in Ethiopia. In the sample areas in this
project the jluoride concentration lies between 3.4 and 24.3 mg/!. The objective of this paper is to present the result of a research aimed at designing and developing a household dejluoridiation unit that is simple, inexpensive and that uses locally manufactured Aluminum Sulfate that will reduce the jluoride concentration to the recommended range. The dejluoridation unit developed by the researchers is simple, just a bucket with a tap. The bucket can be produced from plastic, clay or metal. A sample defluoridiation unit has been developed in the Chemical Engineering laboratory with a plastic bucket and it has been checked to be effective. For the sample produced in the laboratory the cost is around 25 Birr, just the cost of the bucket and the tap. The cost of locally produced Aluminum Sulfate and lime is 2. 5 Birr/Kg and and 1 Birr/ Kg respectively, hence the total cost of chemicals for treating a 20 liter bucket of water is less than 10 cents.

Published

2023-01-31

How to Cite

Woldeyes, B. ., Tefera, N. ., & Dendena, L. . (2023). HOUSEHOLD DEFLUORIDATION UNIT DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT. Zede Journal of Ethiopian Engineers and Architects, 24, 1–9. Retrieved from http://ejol.aau.edu.et/index.php/ZEDE/article/view/6569