TopMyGrade

GCSE/Combined Science/AQA

C10.1Using the Earth’s resources and obtaining potable water: sustainable use, potable water, waste-water treatment and alternative metal extraction

Notes

Earth's Resources and Potable Water (C10.1)

Earth's resources

The Earth provides:

  • Finite (non-renewable): fossil fuels (coal, oil, gas), metal ores, minerals — will eventually run out.
  • Renewable: solar, wind, tidal energy, biofuels, timber (if managed sustainably).

Sustainable development: meeting current needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet theirs.

Potable water

Potable water is water that is safe to drink — low levels of dissolved salts, low microorganism count, appropriate pH (~6.5–8.5), no harmful pollutants.

Note: potable ≠ pure water. Pure water contains no dissolved substances; potable water may contain some minerals.

Obtaining potable water in the UK (fresh water):

  1. Collect water from reservoirs, lakes, rivers, groundwater.
  2. Sedimentation: large particles settle.
  3. Filtration: sand filter removes fine particles.
  4. Chlorination: chlorine gas or sodium hypochlorite added → kills microorganisms (disinfection).
  5. pH adjusted if needed.

Obtaining potable water from salt water (desalination):

  • Distillation: very energy-intensive → expensive; used in water-scarce regions (Middle East).
  • Reverse osmosis: water forced through semi-permeable membrane under pressure; removes dissolved salts. Energy-intensive but less than distillation.

Waste-water treatment

Sewage and industrial waste must be treated before returning to rivers:

  1. Screening: large debris removed.
  2. Sedimentation: solid sludge settles (primary sedimentation).
  3. Biological treatment (trickling filters/activated sludge): bacteria break down organic matter.
  4. Further sedimentation.
  5. Treated water sterilised (chlorination/UV) and returned to environment.

Sludge is treated by anaerobic digestion → biogas (mainly methane — usable as fuel) + digestate (fertiliser).

Alternative metal extraction

Traditional smelting (reducing with carbon) is energy-intensive. Alternatives for low-grade ores:

Bioleaching:
Bacteria oxidise sulfide ores, releasing metal ions into solution (leachate). Metal extracted by displacement or electrolysis. Slow but low energy; can process low-grade ores.

Phytomining:
Plants absorb metal ions from soil; plants harvested and burned; metal extracted from the ash. Sustainable; can remediate contaminated land.

Common exam errors

  1. Saying potable water is pure water — potable means safe to drink, not pure (distilled).
  2. Forgetting that chlorination kills microorganisms (not removes particles — that's filtration).
  3. Confusing bioleaching (bacteria) with phytomining (plants).

AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Potable water treatment

    Describe the stages involved in treating fresh water to make it potable in the UK. [4]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  2. Question 24 marks

    Desalination methods

    (a) Name TWO methods of desalination. [2]
    (b) State the main disadvantage of both methods. [1]
    (c) Why might desalination be more important in the future? [1]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  3. Question 34 marks

    Bioleaching and phytomining

    Compare bioleaching and phytomining as alternative methods of extracting metals from low-grade ores. [4]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  4. Question 46 marks

    Waste-water treatment (6-marker)

    Describe how sewage is treated before the water is returned to rivers. Include the fate of the sludge. [6]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

  5. Question 54 marks

    Sustainable resource use

    (a) Define sustainable development. [1]
    (b) Explain why recycling metals is important from a resource and environmental perspective. [3]

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-deep-combined-science

Flashcards

C10.1 — Using the Earth's resources and obtaining potable water: sustainable use, potable water, waste-water treatment and alternative metal extraction

8-card SR deck for AQA Combined Science topic C10.1

8 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)