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Researchers develop breakthrough test to detect E. coli in drinking water

foodingredientsfirst 2017-09-11
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Researchers at the University of Waterloo, Ontario, have invented a fast, affordable way for developing communities to test their drinking water for potentially deadly E.coli. Unlike current tests that cost about US$70 and can take up to three days to get back from the lab, the Waterloo invention uses paper strips similar to those in litmus tests to produce results in less than three hours at a cost of 50 cents.

“This has the potential to allow routine, affordable water testing to help billions of people in the developing world avoid getting sick,” said Sushanta Mitra, executive director of the Waterloo Institute for Nanotechnology. “It is a breakthrough.” 

Now being refined by Glacierclean Technologies Inc., a start-up company co-founded by Mitra, the test could also improve water safety in remote or rural areas of the developed world and greatly reduce testing costs for municipal treatment systems.

Researchers targeted E.coli - the culprit in a deadly outbreak in Walkerton, ontario in 2000 – because it is an indicator organism of water contamination.

The bottom of the paper strip developed by Mitra and his colleagues is laced with sugar, which begins to dissolve when placed in water. E.coli bacteria are attracted by the resulting sugar trail and get trapped in the porous paper when they come in contact with it.

As water enters the paper, it carries the trapped bacteria into an area of the strip containing a mixture of chemicals. The E.coli react with those chemicals and turn the strip pinkish red to signify a positive test.

With high levels of contamination, a result is produced in just 30 minutes. Low levels of contamination take up to 180 minutes. Work is underway to reduce test times.

Glacierclean, which already sells mobile water kits to detect E. coli for about US$5 a test, hopes to have its DipTest strips on the market within nine months.

“Simple ideas create paradigm shifts in technology and this is a simple, frugal innovation,” said Mitra, also a mechanical and mechatronics engineering professor at Waterloo.

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