Etiam porttitor turpis sit amet mauris volutpat eu ullamcorper libero pulvinar. Integer ornare pulvinar magna. Integer et neque neque. Suspendisse vel diam vitae lorem tincidunt porta. Aliquam erat volutpat. Nam sem urna, sagittis ac tempor non, rutrum nec mauris. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Phasellus eget est magna. Donec in nunc sapien, sit amet tempus augue. Integer aliquet, risus et dapibus pharetra, erat mi blandit lacus, et aliquam risus ipsum id velit. Nulla facilisi. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. Nulla a justo a dui pellentesque gravida. Nulla volutpat ligula eget sem pellentesque elementum. Duis porttitor, sapien et ultrices viverra, ligula magna adipiscing augue, ut porta enim justo at augue.
Greenemeier, Larry. "A Fine Brine: New Desalination Technique Yields More Drinkable Water." Scientific American. At Massachusetts Institute of Technology, researchers are even looking at using nanotechnology for desalination. But nanotechnology -- that is,
the engineering of really, really small objects and structures, smaller than the width of a human hair -- has a lot more potential
to help clean up the world's drinking water.