Background info:I read in a survival book about a makeshift distiller created using a sheet of plastic. It suggested that in dry environments you could crush plant matter and place it under the plastic to add moisture. It even said you could urinate under it, and that the distillate would be "pure" water. I asked my dad (who is a retired chemist) and he said that there are chemicals in urine that are volatile and, thus, will evaporate and condense with the water. Additionally, I read somewhere else that you mustn't use poisonous plants under the plastic, as the resulting distillate will (may?) be poisonous. This confirms what my dad said, and contradicts the first guide I read. Some additional research confirmed that some impurities are NOT removed by distillation.
This lead me to investigate different purification systems. Here are some simple explanations (perhaps some are over-simplified, but I feel those details are beside the point): Boiling will kill some (most?) living things. Filtering will pull out "large" debris. Distillation will leave behind debris, heavy metals, salts, and anything else that doesn't evaporate, BUT it will not leave behind certain chemicals (volatile ones). To get those chemicals out of the water, it seems one needs to use a special filter (with some neutralizing chemical in it) or reverse osmosis where the membrane is fine enough not to allow the target chemical to pass.
My question comes with the goal of being able to purify water WITHOUT the need of special chemicals or bulky filters.
The question:Can volatile chemicals be removed from water by open-boiling it for an extended amount of time?Example:
Let's say I take a gallon of pure water, and mix it with a cup of hydrogen peroxide solution, and a cup of isopropyl alcohol. Now, I wouldn't want to drink that (it'd taste nasty!
). Can I boil that mixture and reduce it to, say, half volume, and be confident that the hydrogen peroxide and isopropyl alcohol have evaporated out of the remaining water?
The bottom line:Can filthy water be confidently purified by first open-boiling it for a while (to remove volatiles) and then distilling it (to remove everything else)? OR are there some chemicals that just can't be separated from water without the help of another chemical?More thoughts:
Any chemical with a lower boiling point than water would evaporate before the water does. Adding salt to the water would increase its boiling point, thus creating a greater disparity and helping the other chemicals evaporate without losing as much water. The salt would be left behind during the distillation process. However, it there is a chemical in the water with a high boiling point, it would be difficult to separate it (I would think). Anyway, sorry for my ramblings. I just thought it would be a good skill to know how to purify water if all I had was fire and a couple of pans. I.e. no access to a Brita filter, reverse osmosis, or activated charcoal.
Many thanks!
-Jonathan