4.7 Article

Molecular transformation of dissolved organic matter and the formation of disinfection byproducts in full-scale surface water treatment processes

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 838, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.156547

Keywords

Dissolved organic matter; Disinfection by-product; FT-ICR MS; Prechlorination; Surface water treatment plant

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52030003, 52122010]

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This study compared the transformation of DOM and the formation of Cl-DBPs in two different surface water treatment processes and analyzed their reaction pathways. The results showed that coagulation preferentially removed unsaturated and oxidized compounds, and prechlorination produced more Cl-DBPs with specific characteristics. Microorganisms in the filter produced high MW substances that contributed to the formation of Cl-DBPs. CHO molecules and CHON molecules were identified as the main Cl-DBPs precursors in both processes.
Dissolved organic matters (DOM) have important effects on the performance of surface water treatment processes and may convert into disinfection by-products (DBPs) during disinfection. In this work, the transformation of DOM and the chlorinated DBPs (Cl-DBPs) formation in two different full-scale surface water treatment processes (process 1: prechlorination-coagulation-precipitation-filtration; process 2: coagulation-precipitation-post-disinfection-filtration) were comparatively investigated at molecular scale. The results showed that coagulation preferentially removed unsaturated (H/C < 1.0 and DBE > 17) and oxidized (O/C > 0.5) compounds containing more carboxyl groups. Therefore, prechlorination produced more Cl-DBPs with H/C < 1.0 and O/C > 0.5 than post-disinfection. However, the algal in the influent produced many reduced molecules (O/C < 0.5) without prechlorination, and these compounds were more reactive with disinfectants. Sand filtration was ineffective in DOM removal, while microorganisms in the filter produced high molecular weight (MW) substances that were involved in the Cl-DBPs formation, causing the generation of higher MW Cl-DBPs under post-disinfection. Furthermore, the CHO molecules with high O atom number and the CHON molecules containing one N atom were the main Cl-DBPs precursors in both surface water treatment processes. In consideration of the putative Cl-DBPs precursors and their reaction pathways, the precursors with higher unsaturation degree and aromaticity were prone to produce Cl-DBPs through addition reactions, while that with higher saturation degree tended to form Cl-DBPs through substitution reactions. These findings are useful to optimize the treatment processes to ensure the safety of water quality.

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