Trihalomethane, chlorite and bromate formation in drinking water oxidation of Italian surface waters
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2004
Abstract:
Recent regulations on drinking water have introduced very restrictive limits for oxidation/disinfection
by-products (DBPs), particularly total trihalomethane concentrations (TTHMs), chlorite and bromate.
Consequently many utilities are closely optimizing their disinfection practices in order to meet the
regulation standards. This study evaluates DBPs formation and suggests some applicability criteria
for chlorine, chlorine dioxide and ozone for different waters.
Different oxidation batch tests with chlorine, chlorine dioxide and ozone were performed on some
raw water samples coming from ten representative sources in Italy: seven artificial lakes and three
rivers. TTHMs, chlorite and bromate increase with increasing chlorine, chlorine dioxide and ozone
dose, respectively. The Italian standard for TTHMs (30 g l-1) is fulfilled by 50% of the waters for
chlorine doses of 1.1–1.2 mg l-1. Because chlorite concentration is about 60% of chlorine dioxide
dose, the Italian standard for chlorite (200 g l-1) is fulfilled for chlorine dioxide doses lower than
0.3–0.4 mg l-1. The maximum concentration of 10 g l-1 for bromate can be respected only for
waters with very low bromide concentration (lower than 20 g l-1) (von Gunten 2003).
by-products (DBPs), particularly total trihalomethane concentrations (TTHMs), chlorite and bromate.
Consequently many utilities are closely optimizing their disinfection practices in order to meet the
regulation standards. This study evaluates DBPs formation and suggests some applicability criteria
for chlorine, chlorine dioxide and ozone for different waters.
Different oxidation batch tests with chlorine, chlorine dioxide and ozone were performed on some
raw water samples coming from ten representative sources in Italy: seven artificial lakes and three
rivers. TTHMs, chlorite and bromate increase with increasing chlorine, chlorine dioxide and ozone
dose, respectively. The Italian standard for TTHMs (30 g l-1) is fulfilled by 50% of the waters for
chlorine doses of 1.1–1.2 mg l-1. Because chlorite concentration is about 60% of chlorine dioxide
dose, the Italian standard for chlorite (200 g l-1) is fulfilled for chlorine dioxide doses lower than
0.3–0.4 mg l-1. The maximum concentration of 10 g l-1 for bromate can be respected only for
waters with very low bromide concentration (lower than 20 g l-1) (von Gunten 2003).
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Collivignarelli, Carlo; Sorlini, Sabrina
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: