The World Health Organization in 2004 estimated approximately 1.1 billion people did not have access to clean water and that 35% of Third World residents died from water-borne illnesses. While the situation is grim, recent advances strongly indicate that many of the current water quality problems ca
Nanotechnology Applications for Clean Water || International Governance Perspectives on Nanotechnology Water Innovation
โ Scribed by Rejeski, David
- Book ID
- 125491274
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Year
- 2014
- Weight
- 114 KB
- Category
- Article
- ISBN
- 1455731161
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The World Health Organization in 2004 estimated approximately 1.1 billion people did not have access to clean water and that 35% of Third World residents died from water-borne illnesses. While the situation is grim, recent advances strongly indicate that many of the current water quality problems ca
The World Health Organization in 2004 estimated approximately 1.1 billion people did not have access to clean water and that 35% of Third World residents died from water-borne illnesses. While the situation is grim, recent advances strongly indicate that many of the current water quality problems ca
The World Health Organization in 2004 estimated approximately 1.1 billion people did not have access to clean water and that 35% of Third World residents died from water-borne illnesses. While the situation is grim, recent advances strongly indicate that many of the current water quality problems ca
Nanotechnology is already having a dramatic impact on improving water quality and the second edition of *Nanotechnology Applications for Clean Water* highlights both the challenges and the opportunities for nanotechnology to positively influence this area of environmental protection. This book prese