I don't want to be mean, but that page is too boring. Can you add some photos? Which type of liquid are you going to procces? Sewer water? Industrial effluents? River water to make it drinkable?
The photos may be the unprocesed liquid and the liquid after it started to precipitate and the final result. Perhaps have two flasks, one with untreated liquid and another with treated liquid. Perhaps three flask with two doses and a control. Bonus points for a video. (Do you know the youtube channels of NileRed and Cody's Lab?)
I studies an specialization in Chemistry in my high school, so I understand most of your technical words. Anyway, I'm too far away from the area since then, so I don't remember the difference betwen coagulants and flocculants. (I guess you want to procces a lot of liquid, so a centrifugue is out of plans.) (Are you going to use some filtration?)
But if you want to contact someone with a stronger machine learning background and less chemistry, you need to "sell" the idea and give a more visual description of the task.
No offense taken.
The landing page is a work in progress.
Yes, I'm familiar with those YT channels.
So, in a one-liner, coagulation flocculation is a process by which colloids and particles are coalesced into larger aggregate clumps, called flocs. These flocs are then easier to filter out.
I'm a final year water-resource engineer, in an accelerator for water/ag tech. I"m looking for co-founder proficient with ML and ANN. My idea is to use AI algorithms to analyze large datasets to identify optimal conditions for coagulation and flocculation, such as the best types and doses of coagulants and flocculants, pH levels, and mixing speeds. This can lead to more efficient and cost-effective treatment.
The photos may be the unprocesed liquid and the liquid after it started to precipitate and the final result. Perhaps have two flasks, one with untreated liquid and another with treated liquid. Perhaps three flask with two doses and a control. Bonus points for a video. (Do you know the youtube channels of NileRed and Cody's Lab?)
I studies an specialization in Chemistry in my high school, so I understand most of your technical words. Anyway, I'm too far away from the area since then, so I don't remember the difference betwen coagulants and flocculants. (I guess you want to procces a lot of liquid, so a centrifugue is out of plans.) (Are you going to use some filtration?)
But if you want to contact someone with a stronger machine learning background and less chemistry, you need to "sell" the idea and give a more visual description of the task.