4.8 Article

Chlorine taste can increase simulated exposure to both fecal contamination and disinfection byproducts in water supplies

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 207, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2021.117806

Keywords

Drinking water; Chlorine; Taste; Disinfection byproducts (DBPs); Monte Carlo simulation; Bangladesh

Funding

  1. Stanford King Center for Global Development
  2. Stanford Center for South Asia
  3. Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment REIP program
  4. National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center for Re-Inventing the Nation's Urban Water Infrastructure [EEC-1028968]
  5. National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship Program - Air Force Research Laboratory
  6. Army Research Office
  7. Office of Naval Research

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The taste of chlorinated water can impact people's acceptance of drinking water treatment, leading to increased microbiological exposure if individuals reject chlorinated water in favor of untreated water. Therefore, taste acceptability should be a critical consideration when establishing chlorination dosing guidelines.
Expanding drinking water chlorination could substantially reduce the burden of disease in low- and middle-income countries, but the taste of chlorinated water often impedes adoption. We developed a Monte Carlo simulation to estimate the effect of people's choice to accept or reject drinking water based on chlorine taste and their subsequent exposure to E. coli and trihalomethanes, a class of disinfection byproduct (DBP). The simulation used empirical data from Dhaka, Bangladesh, a megacity with endemic waterborne disease. We drew on published taste acceptability thresholds from Dhaka residents, measured residual chlorine and thermotolerant E. coli inactivation following the addition of six chlorine doses (0.25-3.0 mg/L as Cl-2) to untreated piped water samples from 100 locations, and analyzed trihalomethane formation in 54 samples. A dose of 0.5 mg/L, 75% lower than the 2 mg/L dose typically recommended for household chlorination of low-turbidity waters, minimized overall exposure to E. coli. Doses of 1-2 mg/L maximized overall exposure to trihalomethanes. Accounting for chlorine taste aversion indicates that microbiological exposure increases and DBP exposure decreases above certain doses as a higher proportion of people reject chlorinated water in favor of untreated water. Taken together with findings from other modeling analyses, empirical studies, and field trials, our results suggest that taste acceptability should be a critical consideration in establishing chlorination dosing guidelines. Particularly when chlorination is first implemented in water supplies with low chlorine demand, lower doses than those generally recommended for household water treatment can help avoid taste-related objections while still meaningfully reducing contaminant exposure.

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