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Potable Water

Key Stage 4

Meaning

Potable water is water that is safe to drink.

About Potable Water

Potable water can be obtained from fresh water or salt water.
The method to obtain potable water depends on the source.
Fresh water is the easiest to make potable. This is done by filtering the water to remove solid particles then adding Chlorine or using Ultraviolet Light to kill any harmful micro-organisms.
Salt water must have the salt removed first. This can be done by distillation which also kills micro-organisms and purifies the water. However, this is very expensive because it requires heating the water. It can also be done using a process called reverse osmosis in which the salt water is sent through pipes at extremely high pressure. The walls of the pipes are a partially permeable membrane and so the high pressure forces the water through but not the salt.

Extra Information


References

AQA

Potable water, page 102, GCSE Chemistry; The Revision Guide, CGP, AQA
Potable water, page 252, GCSE Chemistry, Hodder, AQA
Potable water, pages 163, 165, GCSE Combined Science; The Revision Guide, CGP, AQA
Potable water, pages 195, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy 2, Hodder, AQA
Potable water, pages 208-209, GCSE Chemistry; Third Edition, Oxford University Press, AQA
Potable water, pages 226, 227, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy; Chemistry, CGP, AQA
Potable water, pages 297, 298, GCSE Chemistry, CGP, AQA
Potable water; Production of, pages 195-6, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy 2, Hodder, AQA

Edexcel

Potable (drinkable) water, page 196, GCSE Biology, Pearson, Edexcel
Potable (drinkable) water, pages 14-15, GCSE Chemistry, Pearson, Edexcel
Potable water, pages 112, 113, GCSE Chemistry, CGP, Edexcel
Potable water, pages 303, 304, GCSE Biology, CGP, Edexcel

OCR

Potable water, page 148, Gateway GCSE Combined Science; The Revision Guide, CGP, OCR
Potable water, pages 258-259, Gateway GCSE Chemistry, Oxford, OCR