Absorbent Nanomaterial Cleans up Toxic Water

While researching ways to detect explosives at airports, chemist Paul Edmiston made an unexpected discovery: a new spongelike material he calls "Osorb,' which soaks up oil and other contaminants from water. In this video, he demonstrates how to whip up a batch, adds toxins, filters them out, and then drinks it.

While researching ways to detect explosives at airports, Paul Edmiston, a chemist with the College of Wooster, made an unexpected discovery: a new spongelike material he calls "Osorb." The material soaks up oil and other contaminants from water, Miles O'Brien reports.

In this video, Edmiston shows how to whip up a batch of the stuff, adds toxins, filters them out and then drinks it.

Miles reports for the National Science Foundation's* Science Nation.

**For the record, the National Science Foundation is an underwriter of the NewsHour. *