The World’s Smallest Water Treatment Plant Comes in a Packet
- Menu
- Meetings & Events
- Careers
- Communities
- Officer Toolkit
-
Students & Educators
- Educational Resources
- Educators & Faculty
- Students
- Standards & Guidelines
- Explore Chemistry
- Science Outreach
- Publications
- ACS Student Communities
- LEADS Conference
- ChemMatters
- Chemistry Outreach Activities
- National Chemistry Week
- U.S. National Chemistry Olympiad
- Chemical Technical Professionals
- Chemists Celebrate Earth Week
- Funding & Awards
- Discover Chemistry
- About ACS
- Membership
- Volunteer
- COVID-19
- Climate Science
- Middle School Chemistry en Español
About 800,000,000 people worldwide – that’s almost one in ten, more than the population of the U.S. – don’t have reliable access to clean water. Using a technology first developed to reuse dirty laundry water, scientists have developed a water treatment plant the size of a teabag. Inside, a potent chemical triple-threat removes microbes, heavy metals, silt and dirt to produce clean, safe water one bucket at a time.