Journal
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING
Volume 131, Issue 11, Pages 1574-1582Publisher
ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9372(2005)131:11(1574)
Keywords
dissolved organic carbon; organic matter; disinfection; algae; water quality
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Algae (green, blue-green, and diatom) grown in inorganic media produced particulate and dissolved organic carbon (DOC). DOC produced by a green-alga contains 25% hydrophobic acids. DOC from all algae had specific ultraviolet absorbance values less than 2.0 m(-1) (mg/L)(-1). Algae-produced DOC was biologically labile; greater than 60% degraded in bioreactors within 5 days. The biodegradable material likely included carbohydrates, amino acids, and amino sugars, which were present in hydrophobic acid isolates. Chlorination of alga DOC formed disinfection by-products; DOC from the green alga, Scenedesmus quadricauda, produced chloroform [0.53 micromole per mg carbon (mu mol/mgC)], dichloroacetic acid (0.27 mu mol/mg C), and trichloroacetic acid (0.14 mu mol/mg C). This work complements other studies, which focused on algal total organic carbon (DOC and cellular material), and clearly demonstrates the importance of identifying algae-derived sources of DOC in water supplies and removing such DOC in water treatment plants prior to chlorination.
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