this post was submitted on 01 Mar 2024
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So, the boiling doesn’t remove it at all; it pre-treats hard water, making it capable of being filtered out afterwards.
uh... it seems like it.. if that is the case, the whole article is misleading at best.
Would that just mean boiling water and then filtering it?
If so, doesn't seem as misleading so much as just missing an extra step for a headline. Edit: of course, in addition to the hard water specification.
gotta make the water hard too, doesn't work without hard water
But I can't even make myself hard 😭
too soon.
Many regions won't need that of course :)
Traps it how - guessing as a gas? What the fuck are microplastics and how does clear water trap that? I’m lost as fuck
"calcium carbonate in the (hard) water became solid at higher temperatures, trapping the plastic particles within"
No gas involved. They did recommend straining the boiled water through a coffee filter and the harder the water the better.
If I have soft water, can I add a Tums to my boiling water?
Just put it in the freezer for an hour or two
By causing it to be absorbed into the calcium carbonate that is in hard water
The calcium carbonate in hard water precipitates out when you boil it, i.e. it turns solid.
Microplastics make for great nucleation points for the calcium carbonate to latch onto. So, the microplastics became super easy to filter out of the water (with some getting stuck to the bottom of the kettle in that white scale that you have to use vinegar to clean out.
The calcium carbonate in hard water precipitates out when you boil it, i.e. it turns solid.
Microplastics make for great nucleation points for the calcium carbonate to latch onto. So, the microplastics became super easy to filter out of the water (with some getting stuck to the bottom of the kettle in that white scale that you have to use vinegar to clean out.