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Evaluation of a UV/Ozone Treatment Process for Removal of MTBE in Groundwater Supplies in New Mexico
Citation:
Patterson, C. L., F. Cadena, R. Sinha, D. K. Ngo-Kidd, A. Ghassemi, AND R. Krishnan. Evaluation of a UV/Ozone Treatment Process for Removal of MTBE in Groundwater Supplies in New Mexico. In Proceedings, World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2009, Kansas City, MO, May 17 - 21, 2009. Environmental & Water Resources Institute (EWRI) of ASCE, Reston, VA, 1-7, (2009).
Impact/Purpose:
To inform the public.
Description:
EPA’s Office of Research and Development is funding pilot-scale studies on MTBE contaminated groundwater using UV/ozone treatment technology (254 nm UV, 5.8 mg/L ozone). The pilot-scale treatment system consists of a GW well pump, a feed tank, a pretreatment system (water softener with iron reduction), a low-pressure UV/ozone treatment system, and GAC post treatment. Treatability studies have been conducted by graduate students at New Mexico State University to determine the effectiveness of UV/ozone treatment on well water contaminated by underground plumes of MTBE and other volatile organic compounds. NMSU found UV/ozone treatment to be highly effective for removing MTBE and MTBE byproducts in groundwater. The MTBE concentrations after treatment were much lower (0.4-7.7 µg/L) as compared to the initial influent concentrations (127-251 µg/L). However, acetone was formed during oxidation of MTBE. Future field studies are planned to investigate the impact of enhanced ozone/medium-pressure UV on MTBE and MTBE byproduct removal and alternative technologies for acetone removal.
URLs/Downloads:
EVALUATION OF A UV/OZONE TREATMENT PROCESS FOR REMOVAL OF MTBE IN GROUNDWATER SUPPLIES IN NEW MEXICOProceedings Information