4.7 Article

Filtration for improving surface water quality of a eutrophic lake

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 279, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2020.111766

Keywords

Eutrophication; Filtration; Total phosphorus; Algae; Suspended solids; Non-woven geotextiles

Funding

  1. NSERC [EGP2 468353-2014]
  2. Concordia University

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This on-site study successfully improved the water quality of a eutrophic lake by testing a floating filtration unit using non-woven geotextiles as filter media. Continuous monitoring of water quality and testing different combinations of geotextiles with varying pore sizes achieved high removal efficiency.
Algal blooms and the presence of cyanotoxins in surface water restrict the public from accessing lakes and beaches for drinking and recreational activities. An effort was taken in this on-site study to improve the surface water quality of a eutrophic lake, which has been under a swimming advisory for many years. A floating filtration unit with non-woven geotextiles as a sole filter media was tested for removing algae, nutrients, and suspended solids from overlying water under different lake conditions. Three non-woven geotextiles of different pore sizes were examined in different combinations and lake water quality was monitored for different physico-chemical, biological parameters. A YSI-EXO2 multiparameter probe was used for continuous online water quality monitoring during filtration. Depending on the initial water quality, excellent removal efficiency was observed as follows: 85-98% turbidity, 98-100% total suspended solids (TSS), 57-88% total phosphorus (TP), 33-66% chemical oxygen demand (COD) and 80-96% chlorophyll a (Chl. a.). The filtered lake water quality satisfied the norm set for oligotrophic lakes for TP and Chl. a. Results from this on-site study are very promising, showing the potential applicability of geotextile filtration as an ecologically attractive technique to improve the surface water quality of small aquatic bodies.

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