6 Everyday Ways Science Protects You from Your Poop - YouTube

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[â™Ș INTRO]
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Look. We all poop, but pretty much nobody wants to deal with it.
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We don't want to touch it, smell it, look at it...
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And there’s a really good reason for that.
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While your own poop probably won't hurt you, many serious diseases, like cholera, typhoid,
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and polio, are all caused by microbes in human waste.
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Thankfully, most of us are relatively protected from them and enjoy convenient, clean pooping
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experiences -- but it’s only because of the unsung heroes of your bathroom.
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You probably don’t think about them much, but these little pieces of technology are
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hard at work every day, protecting you from your own waste -- and everyone else’s.
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Here are six of them.
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It may not get lots of fame and glory, but the flush toilet is a kind of modern masterpiece.
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Think about it: There’s no more, like, walking out into the cold outhouse in the dark, no
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stinky chamber pots tucked under the bed.
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You can poop in the comfort of your own home, and it’s magically whisked away down a pipe
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and into the sewer or the septic tank.
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The toilet may be one of the greatest inventions ever, and much of its success is thanks to
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a little-known hero: the S-bend.
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If it hadn’t been created, your bathroom -- and probably the rest of your house -- would
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be filled with
 like, just some nasty sewage stink.
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The S-bend was patented in 1775 by Alexander Cumming, who was also the first to patent
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a flush toilet design.
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Despite the common misconception, it was not Thomas Crapper -- as great as that would be.
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Today, your toilet probably has a differently shaped pipe, called a U-bend, since it’s
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less likely to jam up.
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But the technology works the same way.
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Water settles into the bend in the pipe, also known as the trap, and it blocks stinky sewage
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gases from moving up the pipe and out of your toilet.
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When you flush, a large volume of water rushes from the cistern, or tank, into the toilet
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bowl.
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It pushes the water in the trap up and over the bend, ultimately creating a siphon that
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sucks the waste out of your toilet and down the pipe.
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Then, the water in the bowl and trap is gradually replaced as the cistern refills.
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And all those smelly gases are kept exactly where they belong: not in your house.
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Even if the ingenious bend in your pipes prevents sewer gases from wafting into your home, you
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probably create some stink all by yourself.
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Nobody’s poop smells like roses, but when your roommate walks into the bathroom right
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after you were in there, you may kind of wish it did.
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That’s where corporate America came in.
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Science and entrepreneurs teamed up to create toilet spray, a solution for your stink.
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Just spray it into the bowl before you go, and your problems are supposedly solved.
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This spray works by creating a little oil slick on the surface of the water in your
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toilet bowl.
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This oil acts as a barrier between the toilet water and the air, trapping smelly molecules
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so they don’t stink up the bathroom.
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There are several commercial brands -- like Poo-purri, V.I.
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Poo, and Just a Drop -- as well as homemade versions.
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But they all contain basically the same main ingredients: essential oils, alcohol, and
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glycerine or soap.
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The essential oils create the barrier and provide the pleasant odor.
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And the glycerin or soap, as well as the alcohol, act as surfactants and help the oily and watery
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ingredients mix.
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Officially, the watery and oily molecules are called hydrophilic and hydrophobic, respectively.
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And they don’t like to mingle.
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Surfactants can make them mix because those molecules have both hydrophilic and hydrophobic
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parts.
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They essentially hold hands with the oil and the water, allowing things to blend and keeping
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everything from separating in the spray bottle.
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There’s no shame in your number two, but your roommate might thank for you for applying
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one of these scented spritzes before you

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go make your deposit.
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No matter whether you live by yourself or with a bunch of roommates, you should probably
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still be using another simple, important feature of your toilet: the lid.
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It’s not just there to prevent things from falling in or for aesthetic reasons: It serves
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an important sanitary purpose.
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Putting the lid down before you flush prevents the dreaded toilet plume!
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It’s a real thing!
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Ah—toilet plumes, they occur during flushing.
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When water rushes into the toilet bowl, tiny droplets of liquid, which contain microbes
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from your waste, are blown out and start floating around the air.
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Which nobody wants.
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Get ready to, you know, clutch your pearls here: one study found that the bacterium Clostridium
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difficile, which can cause diarrhea and severe colon inflammation, was suspended in air up
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to 90 minutes after flushing!
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And other studies have shown that norovirus -- a highly contagious cause of vomiting,
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diarrhea, and general misery -- can also end up floating around there and eventually settling
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on surfaces in your bathroom
 like your toothbrush.
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So, for the sake of humanity, put a lid on it!
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Of course, if you’re using a public toilet, these don’t usually have lids.
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According to at least one toilet maker, that’s because people don’t want to touch them,
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and it’s one more part to clean.
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They also would block those fancy auto-flush sensors.
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Still, the seat is probably the least of your worries.
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Public toilets are frequently cleaned -- at least, hopefully -- and the skin on your butt
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is a pretty good barrier to microbes.
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So you’ll probably be fine.
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The bigger risk is getting microbes on your hands.
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So handling those fancy toilet seat covers, or fashioning your own out of toilet paper,
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is probably not a great idea, since these paper supplies are prime targets for the toilet plume.
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Instead, some experts just recommend washing your hands thoroughly on the way out.
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And I will look at you
 if you don’t.
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Like this.
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Now, you can take all kinds of precautions in your home to avoid your waste.
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But what about when you’re in public and there isn’t a bathroom around?
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Enter the chemical toilet -- also known as the porta-potty.
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The porta-potty is nobody's favorite, but without them, outdoor festivals, construction
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sites, and large road races would get pretty messy pretty fast.
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These toilets are basically just big plastic closets full of poo, but they’re still designed
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so that you can think about your waste as little as possible.
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That’s primarily thanks to that mysterious blue stuff in the tank.
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Among other things, this liquid contains a biocide -- something like gluteraldehyde or
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helpful, non-smelly bacteria -- to kill the microbes in poop that create stink.
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Other porta-potties used to use formaldehyde for this, but formaldehyde is actually pretty
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toxic if you come into contact with it, like in the event of a dreaded splash back.
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Today’s blue stuff also contains fragrance to mask odors -- because there will be odors
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-- and a surfactant to make everything mix together.
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But why is that stuff always blue?
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Well, it’s mostly for aesthetics.
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It helps hides the waste in the tank so you’re not treated to an up close and personal view
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of other people’s poop.
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It also serves a crude indicator of when the tank needs to be emptied.
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When there is too much waste in there, the blue fluid turns green.
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So how do they make that happen?
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Well, it’s not fancy chemical reactions.
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There’s also yellow stuff going in there, and yellow and blue make green.
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It’s just
 just art class y’all.
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So if you see the liquid in the porta-potty tank is green, you probably should use a different
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one if there’s one available.
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But your nose also will probably have told you that.
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Thankfully, airplanes do not have water-filled flush toilets.
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If they did, turbulence would get nasty real fast.
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For a while, though, we didn’t actually have a good alternative.
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In the early days of flying, planes had a slop bucket, and World War II pilots often
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had to pee in bottles.
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I don’t know about you, but these both sound like a nightmare on a commercial flight.
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Until the mid-1980s, most airliners used what was essentially a porta-potty with a pump-powered
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flushing mechanism.
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And it pushed the blue fluid into the bowl and then flushed the waste down into a holding tank.
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But this system had some major drawbacks.
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First, to accommodate all that flushing, planes had to carry hundreds of gallons of the blue
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solution, which adds a lot of weight and reduces fuel efficiency.
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Second, these systems had a habit of leaking.
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And if you ever heard of the dreaded blue ice falling from the sky, this is where that
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came from.
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If the waste managed to leak onto the exterior of the plane, it would freeze, because at
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9000 meters the air temperature is around -50°C.
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Then, as the plane started to descend towards the airport, this blue poo-sicle would begin
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to melt and detach from the plane -- which is not only gross but actually dangerous.
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Even a relatively small chunk falling from a height generates a lot of force.
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Blue ice falling off of descending airplanes is known to have torn through the roof of
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a house and smashed a car.
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This isn’t a made-up thing!
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It actually happened.
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And then you have to call your insurance company and be like, “I don’t know man, it’s
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just a chunk of blue stuff and poop.
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It’s on my car.
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I don’t—I don’t—I don’t know how to explain it!”
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Thankfully, most planes nowadays use a fluid free system called a vacuum toilet.
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Now, when you flush the toilet on a plane, a pump generates suction to pull the waste
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into the holding tank.
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A special non-stick coating on the toilet bowl also makes sure there’s a relatively
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clean exit, all without the need for a lot of fluid.
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While it may make a terrifying sound, the vacuum toilet has made planes much more fuel
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efficient.
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And it’s made living near an airport a lot less terrifying.
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Now once you flush, you probably don’t think much about your poop.
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But even if it’s no longer a problem for you personally, collectively, it’s a big problem.
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We humans create large volumes of waste, and for the sake of public health -- and our noses
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-- it needs to be processed before it goes back into the world.
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We’ve talked sewage treatment on SciShow before, but the real heroes in this process
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are the microbes.
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After the garbage and some other solids are filtered out of sewage, microorganisms are
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put to work breaking down the leftover organic matter.
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In other words, they feast on your poo.
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Sewage treatment plants are a virtual microbe zoo, with hundreds of different species enjoying
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that smorgasbord: bacteria, of course, but also fungi, protozoans, rotifers, and nematodes.
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A lot of these microbes are already in your waste when it arrives at the plant, or they
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could come in from the surrounding environment.
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Many treatment plants even seed their sludge with a bit of microbe-filled sewage, too.
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They use it kind of like a sourdough bread starter, if you’re okay with that analogy. [DING]
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The treatment process provides the beneficial microbes with ideal conditions in terms of
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temperature, aeration, and acidity so they can do their job most efficiently.
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Then, before all that waste goes into the environment, the microbes are killed off -- which
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makes sense.
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But someday, scientists might have another use for them, too.
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See, all this waste processing requires a lot of electricity.
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So some teams are trying to take advantage of those sewage microbes and turn them into a battery.
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It’s called a microbial fuel cell.
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When cells -- including bacterial ones -- convert food into energy, they do it using something
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called the electron transport chain.
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They essentially shuttle electrons around.
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The idea behind a microbial fuel cell is to stick some bacteria in a chamber, keep stuffing
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them with sewage, and collect the ions and electrons that spill out.
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Then, as those charged particles flow through a wire, they create an electric current that
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can be stored in a battery.
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This technology is still being developed, and it remains to be seen if it can work on
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the huge scale of a municipal sewage treatment plant, but that’s still pretty slick.
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Using technology to protect you from your waste is an easy place to start a joke, but
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it’s also kind of a big deal.
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Lack of basic sanitation is linked to at least 280,000 deaths per year.
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And the United Nations reports that one of biggest factors determining child survival
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worldwide is sewage disposal.
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The good news is, we’re making progress.
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But if you’re a lucky person with access to a fancy U-bend toilet and modern sanitation,
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don’t take it for granted!
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The science that protects your from your poop makes your life more pleasant and probably
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longer, too!
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Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow!
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You might spend a lot of your time and energy avoiding your waste, but animals have found
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some pretty clever ways to put theirs to work.
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Like, we’re talkin’ poop shields.
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You can learn about them -- and five other ways animals use their poop -- in our episode
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all about that.
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[â™Ș OUTRO]