4.1 Article

Corn starch-based treatment improves rainwater quality

Journal

WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY-WATER SUPPLY
Volume 15, Issue 6, Pages 1326-1333

Publisher

IWA PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.2166/ws.2015.097

Keywords

corn starch; direct filtration; full-scale rainwater treatment; rainwater harvesting

Funding

  1. Financier of Studies and Projects [Finep 2198/07]
  2. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development [CNPq 477102/2007-7, CNPq 477881/2006-8]
  3. Sao Paulo State Research Foundation [FAPESP 09/11726-7]

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Rainwater harvesting can provide an alternative water source, which may demand little treatment, depending on the end use. Some starches have been used in water treatment as coagulant/flocculant/filtration aid, and might be applied as primary coagulant. Here, we show direct filtration with hydraulic rapid mixing, using 2-6 mg L-1 cationic corn starch as primary coagulant, considerably improves roof-harvested rainwater quality, achieving removal efficiencies of up to 71.7% of apparent colour, 78% of turbidity, 1.1 log-unit of total coliform, and 1.6 log-unit of Escherichia coli, meeting guidelines for turbidity, even for potable purposes. Cationic corn starch has proved to be a suitable primary coagulant when filtration is performed in a single-layer sand filter (coefficient of uniformity: 1.8, effective particle size: 0.52 mm), at hydraulic loading rate of 450 m day(-1). However, a disinfection unit is required to meet an absence of faecal coliform.

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