Sunshine,
Di is a term used to describe a process called deionisation. This basically means removing ions (dissolved mineral particles) from a water source. Di resin for large water treatment plants are usually in separate tanks, one is full of cat-ion resin and one full of an-ion resin. In window cleaning and other applications where huge quantities of water purification are not required, the resin is mixed. Hence the term mixed bed resin. For a number of years, this form of water purification was the norm in industry because the resin could be regenerated. However, this is a complex process that requires the use of harsh chemicals such as acids. The reason the resin needs to be regenerated is that as the ions in the water flow over the resin beads, the ions attach themselves to their opposites; much in the same way a magnet attracts its opposites. The resin becomes exhausted and then needs to be changed or regenerated.
Di systems have some advantages, not only are the very efficient when they purify water, they fill at the speed of your tap pressure and waste no water at all. The down side to Di purification is the cost. Unless you are living in a very soft water area and i mean an area where the TDS (Total Dissolved Solids) reading is low, around 30-50 max they are expensive to run.
R/O is a term used to describe a reverse osmosis filter. This form of filtration is far cheaper to run because it self flushes. Water flows across a semi-permeable membrane, the water is under pressure and the smaller water molecules pass through the membrane. The larger particles of dissolved solids (minerals) continue through the filter housing and are flushed to drain. These systems are now in very wide use within large industrial water purification plants and have replaced Di as the preferred form of filtration. The down side of these systems is that they do not recover 100% of the input water. Reverse osmosis is a very reasonable form of water purification, although it is important to buy the best R/O unit you can afford as this will reduce problems caused by insufficient flow rates and early filter changes.
Sorry for the essay!
Regards,
Carl.