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I think it was Nat Geo.. Not sure exactly.. Where I heard, years ago, that a drop of iodine can be used to disinfect water of say, 1 litre.

But isn't chlorine used to kill all bacteria? I mean I don't completely remember that documentary but I'm pretty sure it was iodine that they used.

Can iodine be used or does my memory fail me?

Macindows
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    "Purify" is the wrong word. You don't purify water by adding more impurities to it. Say "disinfect" instead. Then yes, iodine can be used to that end, as well as chlorine. – Ivan Neretin Sep 10 '17 at 12:02
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    As @IvanNeretin states, iodine, as well as chlorine and bromine, are effective disinfectants. See https://www.amazon.com/Coghlans-Emergency-Germicidal-Purification-Treatment/dp/B01LXIGV93/ref=sr_1_11. These halogens, as well as ozone, kill microorganisms though oxidation. [Fluorine is too toxic and corrosive to use for this.] – DrMoishe Pippik Sep 10 '17 at 22:23

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Short answer: Both chlorine and iodine in specific concentrations are used for water disinfection.

Iodine has been used to disinfect water for a long time. It is used in concentrations between 2.5 ppm to 7 ppm, but there is some controversy regarding the maximum safe dose of iodine because excess of iodine consumption in humans can lead to various diseases(thyroid disorders being very common). I believe this is the reason we have moved towards more safer options like chlorine for water disinfection.

Arishta
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  • What dosage of iodine do you recommend then? You've mentioned it's 2.5ppm to 7 but I regret I'm no pro and don't know into how many drops of iodine it translate into for 1 ltr... Thanks! – Macindows Sep 11 '17 at 11:11