Our waterways are becoming more and more polluted due to PFAS, plastics, medicines, drugs, and new chemicals made by companies that just hand over the responsibility of cleaning to plants paid for by public moneys. Detecting the different chemicals and filtering them out if getting harder and harder. Could the simple solution of heating up past a point where even PFAS/forever chemicals decomposes (400C for PFAS, 500C to be more sure about other stuff) be alright?

  • @sploosh@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    113 hours ago

    Evaporation is a component of distilling, but if you don’t capture the vapor and condense it it’s just evaporation.

      • @sploosh@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        211 hours ago

        Because if you capture it you’re distilling instead of evaporating. I’m just pointing out the difference between the two. If you read further up, you will see that I don’t think it’s a good idea.

      • atro_cityOP
        link
        fedilink
        111 hours ago

        There might be things in the vapor that haven’t decomposed or that have decomposed, are toxic, and become airborne.

        • @Tja@programming.dev
          link
          fedilink
          111 hours ago

          Like what? Heavy metals would precipitate, organic compounds would break down. (I’m not a chemist, just have general science background).