WaterApp checks water for contamination

Published 7 May 2015

Researchers have created a mobile app which can determine just how contaminated a sample of water might be. Using tiny pills containing contaminant-detecting enzymes, users can first determine whether their water is clean or not. If the water is clean, the pills will change the color of the water. If it is contaminated with pesticide, heavy metals, or bacteria such as E. coli, it will remain clear. The app complements the pills by analyzing a series of photos of the water to determine just how contaminated the water is.

Researchers at McMaster University’s Biointerfaces Institute have created a mobile app which can determine just how contaminated a sample of water might be.

Using tiny pills containing contaminant-detecting enzymes, users can first determine whether their water is clean or not. If the water is clean, the pills — made of the same material that makes breath-freshening strips melt on your tongue — will change the color of the water. If it is contaminated with pesticide, heavy metals or bacteria such as E. coli, it will remain clear.

A McMaster release reports that the app complements the pills — also developed by McMaster researchers — by analyzing a series of photos of the water to determine just how contaminated the water is. It also allows users to upload information to a central database, allowing others to quickly and easily find hot spots of water contamination.

The Biointerfaces Institute is Canada’s first facility for developing unique new surfaces, like pathogen-detecting paper strips, countertops, and doorknobs, using high-speed robots and other leading-edge technology.

McMaster says that investigators at the lab test millions of combinations of biological agents and complex surfaces in pursuit of rapid solutions to the world’s most pressing health, safety and other problems.