Getting Clean Water

A free interactive lesson on water purification for Class 5 — how a municipal water treatment plant cleans river water in 5 steps, plus home methods like boiling, solar disinfection (SODIS), purification tablets, and filtration. Based on NCERT Class 5 Water. Includes quiz.

Class 5 ScienceClass 5 / Grade 5Ages 7–10
Lesson
🚰 Getting Clean Water
2 billion people drink unsafe water every day.Unsafe water ✗Bacteria, virusesParasites, chemicalsCauses disease ✗Clean water ✓Clear, no germsSafe to drinkKeeps us healthy ✓Water treatment turns unsafe into safe.

Two billion people around the world drink water that isn't safe — and it causes millions of deaths every year from diseases like cholera, typhoid, and diarrhoea. Clean drinking water is one of the most important things a society can provide. Let's understand how water gets cleaned.

Why water needs treatment

Natural water from rivers, lakes, and wells contains suspended solids (mud, leaves), dissolved chemicals (pesticides, fertilisers, heavy metals), and microorganisms (bacteria, viruses, parasites). Drinking untreated water can cause cholera, typhoid, dysentery, hepatitis A, and many other diseases. Water treatment removes these hazards to make water safe to drink.

Municipal water treatment — 5 steps

  1. Screening — large screens remove sticks, leaves, fish, and other large debris at the water intake.
  2. Sedimentation — water is held in large settling tanks so heavy particles sink to the bottom.
  3. Coagulation/flocculation — chemicals like alum (aluminium sulphate) are added. They cause fine particles to clump together into larger "flocs" that sink or can be filtered.
  4. Filtration — water passes through layers of sand and gravel that trap remaining particles and many microorganisms.
  5. Disinfection (Chlorination) — a small amount of chlorine is added to kill bacteria and viruses. The water is now safe to drink.

Home water purification methods

  • Boiling — the oldest and most reliable method. Boiling water for 1 minute kills all bacteria, viruses, and parasites. Allow to cool before drinking.
  • SODIS (Solar Disinfection) — filling clear plastic bottles with water and placing them in direct sunlight for 6+ hours. UV radiation kills pathogens. Used widely in developing countries.
  • Purification tablets — chlorine or iodine tablets dissolve in water and disinfect it within 30 minutes. Used by trekkers and in emergencies.
  • Filtration — ceramic candle filters, biosand filters, and activated carbon filters remove particles, some bacteria, and chemicals. Combined with disinfection, they provide high-quality water.

Frequently asked questions

How is tap water made safe to drink?

Municipal tap water goes through several treatment steps: screening (remove large debris), sedimentation (let particles settle), coagulation (clump fine particles), filtration (sand and gravel layers), and chlorination (kill bacteria and viruses).

Does boiling water make it safe?

Yes — boiling water for at least 1 minute kills all disease-causing bacteria, viruses, and parasites. However, boiling does not remove chemical pollutants or heavy metals. For those, filtration or other methods are needed.

What is SODIS?

SODIS (Solar Disinfection) is a water purification method where water in clear plastic bottles is left in direct sunlight for 6+ hours. UV rays from the sun kill bacteria and viruses. It costs nothing beyond a plastic bottle and is used in many parts of Africa and South Asia.

What does chlorine do in water treatment?

Chlorine kills bacteria and viruses in drinking water — including those that cause cholera, typhoid, and dysentery. A tiny amount (0.2–0.5 mg per litre) is enough to disinfect without being harmful to drink.

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