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  4. Determinants of disinfectant pretreatment efficacy for nitrosamine control in chloraminated drinking water
 
research article

Determinants of disinfectant pretreatment efficacy for nitrosamine control in chloraminated drinking water

Mccurry, Daniel L.
•
Krasner, Stuart W.
•
Von Gunten, Urs  
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2015
Water Research

Utilities using chloramines need strategies to mitigate nitrosamine formation to meet potential future nitrosamine regulations. The ability to reduce NDMA formation under typical post-chloramination conditions of pretreatment with ultraviolet light from a low pressure mercury lamp (LPUV), free chlorine (HOCl), ozone (O-3), and UV light from a medium pressure mercury lamp (MPUV) were compared at exposures relevant to drinking water treatment. The order of efficacy after application to waters impacted by upstream wastewater discharges was O-3 > HOCl approximate to MPUV > LPUV. NDMA precursor abatement generally did not correlate well between oxidants, and waters exhibited different behaviors with respect to pH and temperature, suggesting a variety of source-dependent NDMA precursors. For wastewater-impacted waters, the observed pH dependence for precursor abatement suggested the important role of secondary or tertiary amine precursors. Although hydroxyl radicals did not appear to be important for NDMA precursor abatement during O-3 or MPUV pretreatment, the efficacy of MPUV correlated strongly with dissolved organic carbon concentration (p = 0.01), suggesting alternative indirect photochemical pathways. The temperature dependences during pre- and post-disinfection indicated that NDMA formation is likely to increase during warm seasons for O-3 pretreatment, decrease for HOCl pretreatment, and remain unchanged for MPUV treatment, although seasonal changes in source water quality may counteract the temperature effects. For two waters impacted by relatively high polyDADMAC coagulant doses, pretreatment with HOCl, O-3, and MPUV increased NDMA formation during post-chloramination. For O-3 pretreatment, hydroxyl radicals likely led to precursor formation from the polymer in the latter tests. MPUV treatment of polymer-impacted water increased subsequent NDMA formation through an indirect photochemical process. Many factors may mitigate the importance of this increased NDMA formation, including the low polyDADMAC doses typically applied, and simultaneous degradation of watershed-associated precursors. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.watres.2015.07.024
Web of Science ID

WOS:000362147400019

Author(s)
Mccurry, Daniel L.
Krasner, Stuart W.
Von Gunten, Urs  
Mitch, William A.
Date Issued

2015

Publisher

Elsevier

Published in
Water Research
Volume

84

Start page

161

End page

170

Subjects

NDMA

•

Chloramination

•

polyDADMAC

•

Chlorine

•

Ozone

•

Ultraviolet light

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LTQE  
Available on Infoscience
December 2, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/121046
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