45 research outputs found
Decreased natural organic matter in water distribution decreases nitrite formation in non-disinfected conditions, via enhanced nitrite oxidation
Nitrite in drinking water is a potentially harmful substance for humans, and controlling nitrite formation
in drinking water distribution systems (DWDSs) is highly important. The effect of natural organic matter
(NOM) on the formation of nitrite in simulated distribution systems was studied. The objective was to
inspect how a reduced NOM concentration affected nitrite development via nitrification, separated from
the effects of disinfection. We observed that nitrite formation was noticeably sensitive to the changes in
the NOM concentrations. Nitrite declined with reduced NOM (TOC 1.0 mg L-1) but increased with the
normal NOM concentration of tap water (TOC 1.6 mg L-1). Ammonium oxidation was not altered by the
reduced NOM, however, nitrite oxidation was enhanced significantly according to the pseudo-first order
reaction rate model interpretation. The enhanced nitrite oxidation was observed with both ammonium
and nitrite as the initial nitrogen source. The theoretical maximum nitrite concentrations were higher
with the normal concentration of NOM than with reduced NOM. The results suggest that the role of
nitrite oxidation may be quite important in nitrite formation in DWDSs and worth further studies. As a
practical result, our study supported enhanced NOM removal in non-disinfected DWDSs.Maa- ja vesitekniikan tuki ry.
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An overview on the reactors to study drinking water biofilms
The development of biofilms in drinking water distribution systems (DWDS) can cause pipe degradation, changes in the water organoleptic properties but the main problem is related to the public health. Biofilms are the main responsible for the microbial presence in drinking water (DW) and can be reservoirs for pathogens. Therefore, the understanding of the mechanisms underlying biofilm formation and behavior is of utmost importance in order to create effective control strategies. As the study of biofilms in real DWDS is difficult, several devices have been developed. These devices allow biofilm formation under controlled conditions of physical (flow velocity, shear stress, temperature, type of pipe material, etc), chemical (type and amount of nutrients, type of disinfectant and residuals, organic and inorganic particles, ions, etc) and biological (composition of microbial community e type of microorganism and characteristics) parameters, ensuring that the operational conditions are similar as possible to the DWDS conditions in order to achieve results that can be applied to the real scenarios. The devices used in DW biofilm studies can be divided essentially in two groups, those usually applied in situ and the bench top laboratorial reactors. The selection of a device should be obviously in accordance with the aim of the study and its advantages and limitations should be evaluated to obtain reproducible
results that can be transposed into the reality of the DWDS. The aim of this review is to provide an overview on the main reactors used in DW biofilm studies, describing their characteristics and applications, taking into account their main advantages and limitations.This work was supported by the Operational Programme for Competitiveness Factors COMPETE and by Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology through Project Phyto disinfectants - PTDC/DTPSAP/1078/2012 (COMPETE: FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-028765), the Post-Doc grant awarded to Lucia Simoes (SFRH/BPD/81982/2011). Also, this work was undertaken as part of the European Research Project SUS-CLEAN (Contract n_FP7-KBBE-2011-5, project number: 287514) and the COST Action FA1202. The authors are solely responsible for this work. It does not represent the opinion of the Community, and the Community is not responsible for any use that might be made of data appearing herein