I don't know that there's a way to change the pH of water through filtration. The pH is affected mostly by dissolved gasses and ions which aren't easily removed through filtration alone. You can adjust the pH by using buffered solutions, but then its really not water anymore.
If you just have bad tap water, I am not sure the cost of RO but I am fairly sure its drastically cheaper than a large-scale distilltion setup and might give you water of sufficient quality. I would say the absolute best solution for good H20 is distillation. It doesn't have to be an incredibly fancy setup, and would depend largely on your demand. You may even have luck locating some used equipment for the job in the case that you need to generate lots of it. And if your lab is broke most of the time like mine, for small quantities, you could just use a simple DIY setup. The still has been around for centuries and really hasn't changed drastically in terms of design and basic function. Either way I think it would be worth the investment. -Matt _______________________________________________ Histonet mailing list Histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet