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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsA High School Student Just Built a Water Filter That Removes 96% of Microplastics, Without Expensive Equipment
https://dailygalaxy.com/2026/03/teen-built-water-filter-microplastics/
A high school student in Virginia has built a filtration system that removes more than 95 percent of microplastics from drinking water. Her approach uses a magnetic liquid, ferrofluid, to pull tiny plastic particles out of the flow, without relying on traditional filter membranes.
Mia Heller didnt start in a lab, but in her own house. As explained by Smithsonian Magazine, her family had installed a filtration system that worked, but needed constant maintenance, with filters that had to be replaced again and again. That routine became the starting point for her project. She wanted something simpler, with fewer parts to swap out.
Over time, her design evolved into a three-part system: one chamber for the water, one for the ferrofluid, and a smaller unit where the actual separation happens.

The principle is fairly direct. The ferrofluid sticks to microplastic particles, and a magnetic field pulls the whole mixture out of the water. Then the fluid gets recovered and reused, so the system doesnt rely on disposable components.
Mia Heller didnt start in a lab, but in her own house. As explained by Smithsonian Magazine, her family had installed a filtration system that worked, but needed constant maintenance, with filters that had to be replaced again and again. That routine became the starting point for her project. She wanted something simpler, with fewer parts to swap out.
Over time, her design evolved into a three-part system: one chamber for the water, one for the ferrofluid, and a smaller unit where the actual separation happens.

The principle is fairly direct. The ferrofluid sticks to microplastic particles, and a magnetic field pulls the whole mixture out of the water. Then the fluid gets recovered and reused, so the system doesnt rely on disposable components.
Her prototype removed 95.52 percent of microplastics and was able to recover 87.15 percent of the ferrofluid. That puts it in the same range, or even slightly above,what traditional water treatment plants can achieve, which is typically between 70 and over 90 percent.
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A High School Student Just Built a Water Filter That Removes 96% of Microplastics, Without Expensive Equipment (Original Post)
usonian
9 hrs ago
OP
Nit to pick. I wish that the Smithsonian magazine could afford copy editors or fact checkers.
mahatmakanejeeves
9 hrs ago
#2
leftstreet
(40,478 posts)1. DURec
mahatmakanejeeves
(69,622 posts)2. Nit to pick. I wish that the Smithsonian magazine could afford copy editors or fact checkers.
The freelance writer said that the girl lives in Warrington, Virginia. Has no one at the Smithsonian been to Warrenton, Virginia?
usonian
(25,082 posts)3. Claude?
malaise
(295,742 posts)4. Control your patent young lady
Congrats
That is all
2naSalit
(102,512 posts)5. Excellent!
I hope it can be made for the masses and she makes a healthy profit from it so she can continue to study, if that's what she wants.
a kennedy
(35,917 posts)6. Bravo!!!!
fierywoman
(8,584 posts)7. BRAVISSIMA!!!
msongs
(73,687 posts)8. so where does the removed plastic go? nt
usonian
(25,082 posts)9. Ahem. There are still some open issues. Campen stated that one key point will be making sure the captured microplastics.
Clever answer: Platic-eating bacteria.
Likely Answer: Some fast food chain.
ProfessorGAC
(76,613 posts)10. Cool!
I've heard of ferrofluids but didn't know much about them.
This is clever stuff!