Could I help you?
New Reduced price! AWWA WQTC62375 View larger

AWWA WQTC62375

M00000462

New product

AWWA WQTC62375 Performance of Large-Scale Biological Filtration for Removal of Particles and Biodegradable Organic Matter Produced by Ozonation

Conference Proceeding by American Water Works Association, 11/01/2005

Mofidi, Alexander A.; Johnston, Ric; Coffey, Bradley M.; Gerringer, Fredrick W.; Krasner, Stuart W.

More details

In stock

$10.56

-56%

$24.00

More info

Full Description

Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (Metropolitan) is a water wholesaler supplyingmore than 50-percent of drinking water to over 17-million people in southern California. Metropolitan operates five regional water treatment plants (WTPs) that use conventional coagulation, sedimentation, and multi-media (e.g., anthracite, sand) filtration with a combined design flow capacity of more than 2.5 billion-gallons-per-day. To comply with disinfectants anddisinfection byproducts (D/DBP) regulations set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Metropolitan is retrofitting its WTPs with pre-ozone (upstream of conventional treatment)disinfection. Following ozone retrofit, subsequent chlorination is postponed until after filtration,allowing filters to operate in a biologically-active manner (biofiltration). This allows forbiodegradable organic matter (BOM), produced by ozonation, to be significantly reduced prior todistribution. Metropolitan's H.J. Mills WTP began biofiltration in August 2004 and currentlyoperates biofilters with a 70-percent BOM reduction goal. This manuscript summarizes resultsfrom the first year of biofilter operations, including: BOM removal, bacterial sloughing, effects on filter run length, and effect on the level of WTP-effluent, halogenated DBPs. Includes 14 references, tables, figures.