Homemade Water Purifier Model

Materials: ★☆☆ Easy to get from supermarket or hardware store
Difficulty: ★☆☆ Can be easily done by most teenagers
Safety: ★☆☆ Minimal safety procedures required

Categories: Separating Mixtures, Water and Solubility, Pollution and Conservation, Sustainability, Water Cycle

Alternative titles: Make a Water Filter

Summary

Students build a simple water filter using a cut plastic bottle and layers of materials like sand, gravel, cotton, and activated charcoal. The experiment shows how filters remove impurities from dirty water, though the filtered water is not safe to drink.

Procedure

  1. Ask an adult to cut a clean 2-liter plastic bottle in half. Place the top half upside down into the bottom half to form a funnel.
  2. Place a coffee filter, bandanna, or paper towel at the bottom of the funnel section.
  3. Add filter materials (cotton, charcoal, gravel, sand, etc.) in distinct layers. Record the order of your layers.
  4. Stir dirty water (mixed with soil, coffee grounds, leaves, or oil) and measure out one cup.
  5. Pour the dirty water slowly into the filter while timing how long it takes to pass through. Record the result.
  6. Observe how clear the filtered water looks. Scoop out each layer of filter material and note what impurities it trapped.
  7. Rinse and repeat with different filter material orders to test how layering affects filtration.

Make a simple water filter experiment - SydneyWaterTV:


DIY water filter experiment - Aberdeen Science Centre:


📄 Make a water filter - National Geographic Kids: https://kids.nationalgeographic.com/books/article/water-wonders

📄 The Dirty Water Project: Design-Build-Test Your Own Water Filters - ncwit.org: https://www.teachengineering.org/activities/view/cub_environ_lesson06_activity2

Variations

Safety Precautions

Questions to Consider