Science Inventory

DESIGN OPTIMIZATION OF THE CHLORINATION PROCESS. VOLUME I: COMPARISON OF OPTIMIZED PILOT SYSTEM WITH EXISTING FULL-SCALE SYSTEMS

Citation:

Snepp, E. AND P. Bao. DESIGN OPTIMIZATION OF THE CHLORINATION PROCESS. VOLUME I: COMPARISON OF OPTIMIZED PILOT SYSTEM WITH EXISTING FULL-SCALE SYSTEMS. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/2-81/167 (NTIS PB82100835), 1981.

Description:

Parallel wastewater effluent chlorination studies were done on a mobile optimized chlorination pilot system and the full-scale system at eight different treatment plants. Disinfection efficiency was measured by total coliform enumeration and chlorine residual tests. Parallel flow-through fish bioassays were also conducted at each location. The objectives of the study were as follows: achievement of adequate disinfection with minimum use of chlorine; reduction of cholorine-induced toxicity; and writing of a design manual. At 7 of the 8 plants studied the optimized pilot plant achieved an equivalent level of disinfection with significantly lower chlorine dosage, in some cases more than 50% lower, than the full-scale plants. The pilot plant chlorine residuals were also lower by the same proportions. The reasons for the better pilot plant results were rapid initial mixing, improved chlorine control, and plug flow contact. In most cases the bacterial survival ratio could be expressed as a function of the product of chlorine residual and contact time. There appeared to be, however, a limiting contact time to which this relationship applied. The degree of coliform reduction obtained during initial mixing appeared to be a function of chlorine residual.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:09/30/1981
Record Last Revised:12/22/2005
Record ID: 45756