Startup in Bengal develops a device to produce oxygen from water

Kolkata | Friday | 24th June, 2022

Summary:

Kolkata, Jun 24 (PTI) A startup in West Bengal has come out with a device that produces oxygen from water just by pressing of a switch, the founders of the technology claimed.

"OM Redox", the device developed by Solaire Initiatives Pvt Ltd, which is incubated in the Webel-BCC&I Tech Incubation Centre here, provides pure oxygen from water, they said.

The machine is nothing but a “deep science innovation that generates oxygen which is 3.5 times purer than that one normally gets from a concentrator”, the startup venture"s cofounders Dr Soumyajit Roy and his wife Dr Pei Liang claimed on Thursday.

The device was selected by the Department of Biotechnology for showcasing and launch on its 10th foundation day and at the 1st Bio-Tech Expo 2022.

“Pressure swing adsorption method for production of oxygen works with the liquefaction of air, while concentrator operates through concentration of air by a compressor and then passing it through a catalyst.

In these two processes, oxygen is generated from the air.

Ours is an alternative technology,” Roy, the professor of Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Kolkata.

He said their innovation is called pneumatically coupled water oxidation by electrocatalytic reaction (Power) in which the life-saving gas is produced from water.

The machine was among the products that were featured in a book released by Union Science and Technology Minister Dr Jitendra Singh commemorating 75 years of Independence.

“This technology is patented, and approved by World Health Organization and European Conformity,” he claimed, adding that the scientist couple is in discussion with various organisations for licensing the device and manufacturing and marketing of it.

"The product is a sleek white pinewood box, weighing 8 kg, which provides oxygen just on pressing a switch and runs with electricity and also with a battery back-up of 3.5 hours," said Pei Liang, a bachelor of medicine from a Huazhong University of Science and Technology in China.

The device can be made handy and scaled up, she said at a programme organised jointly by West Bengal Electronics Industry Development Corporation Limited (Webel) and the Bengal Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

“We are actively considering the proposal for manufacturing and marketing of the device that produces oxygen.

We are positive about the technology and impressed with its simplicity of it.

A girl or boy can operate the device.