Portable sensor enables community lead detection in tap water
2025-05-29
(Press-News.org) Lead contamination in municipal water sources is a consistent threat to public health. Ingesting even tiny amounts of lead can harm the human brain and nervous system — especially in young children. To empower people to detect lead contamination in their own homes, a team of researchers developed an accessible, handheld water-testing system called the E-Tongue. This device, described in ACS Omega, was tested through a citizen science project across four Massachusetts towns.
“I was driven by the reality that families could be unknowingly exposed to lead,” says Pradeep Kurup, principal investigator. “With the E-Tongue, we are putting knowledge and power directly into people’s hands so they can protect their health and advocate for safer water in their communities.”
Traditional water tests are costly and time-consuming, requiring specialized scientific equipment and long processing times. Furthermore, while water treatment plants do an excellent job of removing contaminants, old lead pipes and plumbing fixtures in homes can still be a source of lead contamination. To address this issue, a team of researchers led by Kurup designed a portable device called the E-Tongue that can analyze water samples and can be operated by the average person.
The E-Tongue works by applying a voltage to a water sample, causing any lead ions present to stick to the sensor’s gold electrode. Then, the voltage is reversed, causing the lead to come off the sensor and produce an electrical current. The strength of this current indicates how much lead is in the water sample. If lead is detected, a smartphone app linked to the device alerts the user with a color-coded reading and a concentration value that indicates the severity of contamination. A green screen indicates that the lead concentration is below the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) regulatory limits. A red screen indicates that the lead concentration exceeds the regulatory limits.
To test the E-Tongue’s usability and performance, the researchers worked with 317 residents from four local towns. The residents first combined a sample of their tap water with a premade buffer solution in a glass vial. Then, they followed three steps on the smartphone app: click “start” after placing the sensor into the vial, click “run” to begin the test and click “end” to save test results and share them with the researchers and local municipalities. If lead was detected above the EPA’s maximum allowed level of 10 parts per billion, the researchers verified the results through a certified laboratory using traditional detection methods to ensure E-Tongue’s accuracy.
The researchers found that:
The amounts of lead contamination in tap water samples varied across the four Massachusetts towns.
Ten of the 634 samples collected by the residents exceeded the EPA’s maximum allowed level of lead, with several other samples approaching this value.
The E-Tongue’s readings were as accurate as traditional laboratory tests.
This study demonstrates the effectiveness of the E-Tongue as a rapid and reliable device for at-home detection of lead in drinking water. The researchers hope this tool will soon be a practical option for detecting and mitigating heavy metal contaminants in municipal water sources, thereby empowering communities to keep themselves safe.
The authors acknowledge funding from the National Science Foundation.
###
The American Chemical Society (ACS) is a nonprofit organization founded in 1876 and chartered by the U.S. Congress. ACS is committed to improving all lives through the transforming power of chemistry. Its mission is to advance scientific knowledge, empower a global community and champion scientific integrity, and its vision is a world built on science. The Society is a global leader in promoting excellence in science education and providing access to chemistry-related information and research through its multiple research solutions, peer-reviewed journals, scientific conferences, e-books and weekly news periodical Chemical & Engineering News. ACS journals are among the most cited, most trusted and most read within the scientific literature; however, ACS itself does not conduct chemical research. As a leader in scientific information solutions, its CAS division partners with global innovators to accelerate breakthroughs by curating, connecting and analyzing the world’s scientific knowledge. ACS’ main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.
Registered journalists can subscribe to the ACS journalist news portal on EurekAlert! to access embargoed and public science press releases. For media inquiries, contact newsroom@acs.org.
Note: ACS does not conduct research but publishes and publicizes peer-reviewed scientific studies.
Follow us: Facebook | LinkedIn | Instagram
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-05-29
Young consumers who shop online and have FOMO (fear of missing out) tend to feel lower levels of social, psychological and financial well-being, a new study finds – but there’s one important caveat.
Researchers found that having a stronger attachment to a social media influencer is linked to younger consumers having improved feelings of well-being in those areas.
The findings show a complex dynamic for young people who follow the latest trends in fashion as they shop online ...
2025-05-29
Korea Institute of Civil Engineering and Building Technology (KICT, President Park, Sun-Kyu) has successfully developed a real-time, low-cost algal bloom monitoring system utilizing inexpensive optical sensors and a novel labeling logic. The system achieves higher accuracy than state-of-the-art AI models such as Gradient Boosting and Random Forest.
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) pose significant threats to water quality, public health, and aquatic ecosystems. Conventional detection methods such as satellite imaging and UAV-based remote sensing are cost-prohibitive ...
2025-05-29
Nanomedicines, especially those based on nanoparticles, are revolutionizing healthcare in terms of both diagnostics and therapeutics. These particles, often containing metals like iron or gold, can serve as contrast agents in medical imaging, act as nutritional supplements, and even function as carriers for drug delivery. Thanks to their unique properties plus careful engineering, nanomedicines can reach and accumulate in places within the body that conventional medicines cannot, making them promising for cancer detection and treatment. However, the same characteristics that make nanomedicines ...
2025-05-29
Montreal, May 29, 2025 - Caffeine is not only found in coffee, but also in tea, chocolate, energy drinks and many soft drinks, making it one of the most widely consumed psychoactive substances in the world.
In a study published in April in Nature Communications Biology, a team of researchers from Université de Montréal shed new light on how caffeine can modify sleep and influence the brain's recovery — both physical and cognitive — overnight.
The research was led by Philipp Thölke, ...
2025-05-29
CLEVELAND—CAR T cell immunotherapy, which uses a patient’s own modified immune cells to find and destroy cancer cells, can produce dramatic results when treating blood cancers like lymphoma and leukemia and shows promise against solid tumors.
But harvesting T cells, a type of white blood cell that helps the immune system fight germs and protect against disease, is difficult and expensive—limiting the use of this potentially life-saving therapy to major cancer centers and after other treatments have failed.
Now a team of researchers at Case Western Reserve University is developing a new device to harvest T cells that might make CAR ...
2025-05-29
SHERBROOKE, Canada (May 29, 2025) – Nord Quantique, a pioneer in the field of quantum error correction, today announces a first in applied physics. The company has successfully developed bosonic qubit technology with multimode encoding, which outlines a path to a major reduction in the number of qubits required for quantum error correction (QEC). The result is an approach to quantum computing which will deliver smaller yet more powerful systems that consume a fraction of the energy. These smaller systems are also simpler to develop to utility-scale due to their size and lower requirements ...
2025-05-29
Researchers have uncovered that some childhood cancers have a substantially higher number of DNA changes than previously thought, changing the way we view children’s tumours and possibly opening up new or repurposed treatment options.
Concentrating on a type of childhood kidney cancer, known as Wilms tumour, an international team genetically sequenced multiple tumours at a resolution that was previously not possible. This collaboration included researchers at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, University of Cambridge, Princess Máxima Center for Pediatric Oncology, the Oncode Institute in the Netherlands, Great Ormond Street Hospital, and Cambridge University ...
2025-05-29
ITHACA, N.Y. – A new material developed at Cornell University could significantly improve the delivery and effectiveness of mRNA vaccines by replacing a commonly used ingredient that may trigger unwanted immune responses in some people.
Thanks to their ability to train cells to produce virus-killing proteins, mRNA vaccines have gained popularity over the last five years for their success in reducing the severity of COVID-19 infection. One method for delivering the mRNA to cells is by packaging it inside fatty spheres, called lipid nanoparticles, that protect it from being degraded. However, a common component of ...
2025-05-29
The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, commonly referred to as the “AMOC,” is a system of ocean currents confined to the Atlantic basin that plays a crucial role in regulating Earth’s climate by transporting heat from the Southern to the Northern Hemisphere. The AMOC also modulates regional weather, from the mild summers in Europe to the monsoon seasons in Africa and India. Climate models have long predicted that global warming will cause the AMOC to weaken, with some projecting substantial weakening ...
2025-05-29
MISTRAL is a new generation receiver installed on the Sardinia Radio Telescope (SRT) and built by the Sapienza University of Rome for the National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF) as part of the upgrade of the radio telescope for the study of the Universe at high frequencies, funded by a PON (National Operational Program) project, concluded in 2023 and now providing its first significant scientific results. MISTRAL stands for “MIllimetric Sardinia radio Telescope Receiver based on Array of Lumped elements kids”.
MISTRAL is an innovative receiver in many ways. Radio astronomy ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Portable sensor enables community lead detection in tap water