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Water Quality

10000. Filtration, 1905. Water Quality. 6000. 2000. Chlorination, 1905. Freshman Clinic II. Number of typhoid deaths, Philadelphia. 800. 200. 0. 1885. 1895. 1905. 1915. 1925. 1935. Adopted from ASCE. Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974.

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Water Quality

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  1. 10000 Filtration, 1905 Water Quality 6000 2000 Chlorination, 1905 Freshman Clinic II Number of typhoid deaths, Philadelphia 800 200 0 1885 1895 1905 1915 1925 1935 Adopted from ASCE

  2. Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974 • Ensure public water supply systems meet minimum standards for protection of public health • Primary Regulations • Secondary Regulations http://www.epa.gov/safewater/mcl.html

  3. Primary Drinking Water Standards • Protection of human health • Maximum Contaminant Level Goal • Nonenforceable health goal • What we’d like to achieve • Maximum Contaminant Level • Set as close to MCLG as feasible (tech/cost) • Violation requires corrective action

  4. Primary Standards • Organics • Pesticides, Solvents, Fuels... • Inorganics • metals... • Radionuclides • Beta particles, alpha particles, radon... • Microbials • viruses, bacteria, protozoa, helminths

  5. Example Contaminants TT – Treatment Technology (filtration and disinfection, or alternative that achieves 99.9% removal/inactivation)

  6. Aside - Units • Concentration • mg/l (milligrams per liter) • milli = 1/1,000 • ug/l or mg/l (micrograms per liter) • micro = 1/1,000,000 • pCi/l (picocuries per liter) • pico = 1/1,000,000,000,000 • The curie is equal to 37 billion disintegrations per second, approximately the activity of 1 gram of radium

  7. Microbial Pathogens • Tiny living organisms that cause disease • Can be • Viruses • Bacteria • Protozoa • Helminths • But not all viruses, bacteria, protozoa, and helminths are pathogens

  8. Measurement • Organics and Inorganics • measure for specific compound • HPLC, GC, GC-Mass Spec, AA, IC… • Radionuclides • Conduct gross tests, then specific tests • Microbes • Measure indicator organisms

  9. Indicatororganisms • Too difficult to identify all pathogens, so we use indicator organisms • May not be pathogens themselves • If you find indicator organisms • sample might be pathogen contaminated • If you don’t • very unlikely sample is contaminated

  10. Common Indicator Organisms • Total Coliform • Fecal Coliform • Escherichia coli • Common denominator is fecal coliform • found in intestines • evidence of fecal contamination E. Coli http://www.cellsalive.com/

  11. Secondary Drinking Water Standards • Not health related • Not enforceable • Based on • Aesthetics • Color, odor, taste, foaming… • Cosmetic effects • Skin or tooth discoloration • Technical effects • Corrosivity, staining, scaling, sedimentation

  12. Examples of Secondary Standards PARAMETER GOAL REASON Chloride 250 mg/L salty taste Copper 1.0 mg/L metallic taste; blue-green staining Corrosivity Non-corrosive metallic taste; corroded pipes/ fixtures staining Fluoride 2.0 mg/L tooth discoloration Foaming agents 0.5 mg/L frothy, cloudy; bitter taste; odor Iron 0.3 mg/L rusty color; sediment; metallic taste; reddish or orange staining pH 6.5 - 8.5 low pH: bitter metallic taste; corrosion high pH: slippery feel; soda taste; deposits Silver 0.1 mg/L skin discoloration; graying of the white part of the eye Sulfate 250 mg/L salty taste Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) 500 mg/L hardness; deposits; colored water; staining; salty taste

  13. another secondary standard Odor • Threshold odor number (TON) • Goal is < 3 TON • Determined by panels of “smellers” identifying the most dilute sample they can smell • A = ml sample • B = ml odor-free water TON = (A + B) / A Electronic Noses are finding more application

  14. another secondary standard Color • Goal is < 15 color units • True Color • vegetable or organic extracts that are dissolved or too small to filter • Also called “natural color”, usually yellowish-brown • South Jersey rivers have lots of true color • Apparent Color • suspended matter, such as red clay • Can be filtered out

  15. Color Measurement • Traditional • chemical solutions that produce color similar to natural color • Platinum Cobalt Color Units • start w/ 500 mg/L solution K2PtCl6 • add sufficient cobalt chloride to provide proper tint • dilute to produce working standards • 1 mg/L of K2PtCl6 = 1 platinum cobalt unit • Modern • Use a spectrophotometer

  16. Spectrophotometer Hach model DR/4000 UV VIS www.hach.com

  17. Light Absorbance • Many solutions absorb light • Amount of absorbance function of • chemicals in solution and their concentration • distance light travels through solution • wavelength of light

  18. Spectrophotometry • Widely used • Accurate and sensitive • Absorbance of light used to measure concentration of light absorbing compounds • If compound itself doesn’t absorb light, reactant is added that converts it to some other (light absorbing) compound Red solutions are red because they absorb blue light

  19. Beer-Lambert law • Amount of light absorbed is proportional to number of molecules of absorbing substance in light path • Absorbtion proportional to • concentration of chromogen (light absorbing compound) • length of light path through solution

  20. -log10(I/I0) = K c l • I and I0 = intensity of transmitted light in presence / absence of chromogen, respectively • c = concentration of chromogen • l = length of light path through solution • K = constant, characteristic for each absorbing substance at a specified wavelength of light and in a specific solvent (often water) • light transmission = I/I0, usually reported as a percent • Absorbance (Abs) is used more frequently Abs = -log10(I/I0)

  21. Hach model DR/4000 UV VIS • Uses Deuterium Lamp and gas filled Tungsten Lamp • Narrows light down to a specific wavelength using a monochromator • Detects the difference in light through a solution photoelectrically and compares that difference electronically • The difference is expressed as percent transmission or absorbance www.hach.com

  22. cells or cuvettes • carefully made solution containers • plane, parallel sides ensure light path is same through all portions, making it possible to tabulate values of K for various substances in various solvents and wavelengths

  23. Color and Spectrophotometry • We can measure color in water samples using a specific wavelength of light • Measure true color of filtered water • Measure apparent color of unfiltered water

  24. Turbidity • Clarity of water • Cause • Soil runoff, resulting in scattering of light by colloidal particles • colloidal particles are 0.001 to 1 mm • Why do we care? • Clarity relates to cleanliness • Affects treatment success of disinfection • Measurement • light transmission with standard light source, 90o detector, and glass container • Measured in NTU (Nephelometric Turbidity Units)

  25. > 5 NTU's < 0.1 NTU Surface water typical values 11 NTU 16 NTU 26 NTU Detected visually Aesthetically objectionable Properly treated water Reservoir Lake River Some NTU Numbers

  26. Turbidity Standard • Primary drinking water standard • Turbidity may never exceed 1 NTU, and must not exceed 0.3 NTU in 95% of daily samples in any month • Why primary? • Because water with low turbidity is less likely to be contaminated by pathogens and disinfects easier

  27. Hach 2100N Laboratory Turbidimeter www.hach.com

  28. Turbidimeter • Micro-processor-based model • Employs advanced optical and electronic design • Has two types of sensors • Scattering Sensor • Transmissive Sensor

  29. Turbidity Test

  30. Websites • EPA Office of Water • www.epa.gov/OW/ • Water Quality Company • www.hach.com • Frequently asked questions about water quality • www.sioxlan.com • Water Environment Federation • www.wef.org • American Water Works Association • www.awwa.org • Info on water treatment processes • www.culligan.com

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