[Histonet] Dionized vs distilled water

Gary Gill garygill <@t> dcla.com
Tue Oct 28 12:03:29 CST 2003


Last I read, no one has ever seen 100% pure water.
 
Gary Gill
-----Original Message-----
From: Morken, Tim - Labvision [mailto:tpmorken <@t> labvision.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2003 12:53 PM
To: 'JCarpenter764 <@t> aol.com'; histonet <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: RE: [Histonet] Dionized vs distilled water


Distilled water is classically produced by heating water to evaporation and
subsequent condensing on a cold surface. In the process most impurities are
either evaporated off ahead of the water (in the case of most organics), or
left behind (in the case of minerals). The water is also effectively
deionized because the salts are left behind. It is fairly pure water. To get
very pure water it needs to be re-distilled several times.
 
Deionized water is classically passed through a salt bed or ionized resin
bed that captures the mineral ions (ie, a "water softener"). The water is
not necessarily pure, however, especially in regards to organic chemicals.
Reverse osmosis is also used now days to deionize water.
 
 
High quality water systems these days are some combination of filters,
distillation, deionizing resins and reverse osmosis. 
 
Tim Morken
 
-----Original Message-----
From: JCarpenter764 <@t> aol.com [mailto:JCarpenter764 <@t> aol.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2003 7:45 AM
To: histonet <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: [Histonet] (no subject)
 
while studying for my exam on the different fixatives and there
ingredients....i have noticed that some call for distilled water and some
use the term deionized water.  Is there a difference?
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