4.6 Article

Modeling chloramine decay in full-scale drinking water supply systems

Journal

WATER ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH
Volume 91, Issue 5, Pages 441-454

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/wer.1046

Keywords

chloramine decay; EPANET-MSX; water distribution; water quality modeling

Funding

  1. North Carolina State University

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Chloramines are commonly used as secondary disinfectants in drinking water treatment, providing a residual for disinfection as drinking water moves to consumers. Chloramines are inherently unstable, undergoing autodecomposition reactions even in the absence of reactive substances. In the presence of natural organic matter (NOM), chloramine loss accelerates due to additional reaction pathways. In this study, batch reaction models for chloramine loss due to autodecomposition and the presence of NOM were developed. A case study was carried out for the Town of Cary, North Carolina. A hydraulic model of Cary's distribution system was developed and calibrated using the EPANET toolkit with operational and water demand data supplied by Cary. Then, water age from the hydraulic model was used together with the batch model of chloramine decay to successfully predict chloramine concentrations spatially and temporally throughout the network. The capabilities of the EPANET-MSX toolkit to model chloramine loss in a distribution network are explored. (C) 2019 Water Environment Federation

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