Low Carbon: New washing machine uses one cup of water
An environmentally-friendly washing machine developed in Britain that uses only one cup of water to clean clothes could be on sale next year.
The appliance, which could save billions of litres of water a year, has been developed at the University of Leeds.
It uses less than 10 per cent of the water of conventional machines and 30 per cent less energy by replacing most of the water with thousands of tiny reusable plastic beads to attract and absorb dirt under humid conditions.
Xeros, the company behind the technology, will start selling the machine to commercial customers such as hotels and dry cleaners before taking the idea to ordinary household consumers
Only a small amount of water and detergent is needed to dampen the clothes, loosen stains and create the water vapour that allows the beads to work. After the cycle is finished, the beads fall through a mesh in the machine's drum and can be re-used up to a hundred times.
The full original story can be found at Telegraph.co.uk
Older/Newer
« Low Carbon: Festivals play the green card | Low Carbon: Waste transfer stations to be built »
0 TrackBacks
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Low Carbon: New washing machine uses one cup of water.
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://blogs.chesterchronicle.co.uk/cgi-bin/mt421/mt-tb.cgi/135964




