As a swimmer, Burnsville High School student Suraj Shah has always loved water. But he had never thought about the global shortage of drinkable water until last fall, when he began considering possible science fair projects for biology class.
He decided to create a portable water filter. Since then, his idea has taken him to an international science fair and into meetings with a patent attorney, where he's discussing patenting it.
"I've always wanted to do something that benefits the community and the environment," said Shah, who will be a junior.
Shah decided last fall that he wanted to create a portable water filter so that people in places like in sub-Saharan Africa and Haiti, as well as those affected by natural disasters, could purify water themselves using an inexpensive hand-held device.
His device uses a syringe-like design to pump water through pieces of PVC pipe and through a 3M filter.
Early in the process, Shah went to see Sue Borne, his former middle school teacher in Metcalf Junior High's STEM Magnet program. While there, he had a brainstorm after spotting a syringe in her classroom.
"I knew I needed to create pressure," he said. If the device was to be portable and cheap, it couldn't use a generator for electricity.
He thought that if he could "make a large-scale syringe, that would be pretty simple and effective as well," he said.