4.6 Article

Theoretical Estimation of Disinfectant Mass Balance Components in Drinking Water Distribution Systems

Journal

WATER
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w15020368

Keywords

water quality audit; disinfectant mass loss; water loss; water distribution network; theoretical estimation

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The water quality audit concept is crucial for evaluating the loss of disinfectant mass in drinking water distribution systems. This study proposes a novel method using a simple theoretical analysis to assess the loss components (Ml, Mr, and MWL) based on the ratio of water losses (p) and the ratio of disinfectant concentrations at critical points (Cp*). The results indicate the effectiveness of these equations in auditing the loss of disinfectant mass in drinking water distribution networks.
The water quality audit concept is an important feature in assessing the loss of disinfectant mass in drinking water distribution systems. Based on this concept, the loss can be divided into the loss of disinfectant mass through water losses (Ml) and the decay of disinfectant mass due to chemical reactions (Mr). When an audit focuses on the effect of water losses on the loss of disinfectant mass, the decay of disinfectant mass by chemical reactions with the ideal condition of no water losses (Mro) has to be estimated; thus, the disinfectant mass associated with water losses (MWL=Ml+Mr-Mro) can be assessed. Generally, the computation of these components (Ml, Mr, and MWL) needs hydraulic and water quality modeling. In this study, we propose a novel method based on a simple theoretical analysis to evaluate these components using only two parameters: the ratio of water losses (p) and the ratio of disinfectant concentrations at the critical pressure point and the network inlet (Cp*). The coefficients of our theoretical Ml, Mr, and MWL were estimated using 20 real network models, with p between 2.8% and 54.9% and Cp* between 18.4% and 91.9%. The results showed that our equations were effective at assessing the loss of disinfectant mass in drinking water distribution networks for the top-down auditing approach.

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