this post was submitted on 01 Mar 2024
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I wonder how effective the standard small filters are against microplastics? I had assumed they likely dealt with a lot of the problem already but I suspect a Zerowater big filter is very effective against microplastics given it removes all dissolved solids. It is at least a personal solution to reduce the impact of microplastics in drinking water but its not going to solve it coming in every food.
I wonder as well. My filter is made of plastic, and my water lines are plastic. Sometimes my cup is plastic. Do I get more micro plastics after the filtration process?
Of course, unreacted monomers are present in all plastic. It's a question of how many and how harmful they are.
I was also thinking similar, does puttingan RO system for just the drinking water solve this?
Yes most definitely.
Micro plastics are defined as plastic sizes from 5mm down to 1.6 Microns.
A typical consumer grade RO can easily filter down to 0.001 Microns. Which not only removes micro plastics but almost all bacteria and viruses as well.