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Formation of assimilable organic carbon during oxidation of natural waters with ozone, chlorine dioxide, chlorine, permanganate, and ferrate.
Water Res. 2011 Feb; 45(5):2002-10.WR

Abstract

Five oxidants, ozone, chlorine dioxide, chlorine, permanganate, and ferrate were studied with regard to the formation of assimilable organic carbon (AOC) and oxalate in absence and presence of cyanobacteria in lake water matrices. Ozone and ferrate formed significant amounts of AOC, i.e. more than 100 μg/L AOC were formed with 4.6 mg/L ozone and ferrate in water with 3.8 mg/L dissolved organic carbon. In the same water samples chlorine dioxide, chlorine, and permanganate produced no or only limited AOC. When cyanobacterial cells (Aphanizomenon gracile) were added to the water, an AOC increase was detected with ozone, permanganate, and ferrate, probably due to cell lysis. This was confirmed by the increase of extracellular geosmin, a substance found in the selected cyanobacterial cells. AOC formation by chlorine and chlorine dioxide was not affected by the presence of the cells. The formation of oxalate upon oxidation was found to be a linear function of the oxidant consumption for all five oxidants. The following molar yields were measured in three different water matrices based on oxidant consumed: 2.4-4.4% for ozone, 1.0-2.8% for chlorine dioxide and chlorine, 1.1-1.2% for ferrate, and 11-16% for permanganate. Furthermore, oxalate was formed in similar concentrations as trihalomethanes during chlorination (yield ∼ 1% based on chlorine consumed). Oxalate formation kinetics and stoichiometry did not correspond to the AOC formation. Therefore, oxalate cannot be used as a surrogate for AOC formation during oxidative water treatment.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Ueberlandstrasse 133, Duebendorf CH-8600, Switzerland.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

21220144

Citation

Ramseier, Maaike K., et al. "Formation of Assimilable Organic Carbon During Oxidation of Natural Waters With Ozone, Chlorine Dioxide, Chlorine, Permanganate, and Ferrate." Water Research, vol. 45, no. 5, 2011, pp. 2002-10.
Ramseier MK, Peter A, Traber J, et al. Formation of assimilable organic carbon during oxidation of natural waters with ozone, chlorine dioxide, chlorine, permanganate, and ferrate. Water Res. 2011;45(5):2002-10.
Ramseier, M. K., Peter, A., Traber, J., & von Gunten, U. (2011). Formation of assimilable organic carbon during oxidation of natural waters with ozone, chlorine dioxide, chlorine, permanganate, and ferrate. Water Research, 45(5), 2002-10. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2010.12.002
Ramseier MK, et al. Formation of Assimilable Organic Carbon During Oxidation of Natural Waters With Ozone, Chlorine Dioxide, Chlorine, Permanganate, and Ferrate. Water Res. 2011;45(5):2002-10. PubMed PMID: 21220144.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Formation of assimilable organic carbon during oxidation of natural waters with ozone, chlorine dioxide, chlorine, permanganate, and ferrate. AU - Ramseier,Maaike K, AU - Peter,Andreas, AU - Traber,Jacqueline, AU - von Gunten,Urs, Y1 - 2010/12/09/ PY - 2010/07/12/received PY - 2010/11/26/revised PY - 2010/12/01/accepted PY - 2011/1/12/entrez PY - 2011/1/12/pubmed PY - 2011/6/7/medline SP - 2002 EP - 10 JF - Water research JO - Water Res VL - 45 IS - 5 N2 - Five oxidants, ozone, chlorine dioxide, chlorine, permanganate, and ferrate were studied with regard to the formation of assimilable organic carbon (AOC) and oxalate in absence and presence of cyanobacteria in lake water matrices. Ozone and ferrate formed significant amounts of AOC, i.e. more than 100 μg/L AOC were formed with 4.6 mg/L ozone and ferrate in water with 3.8 mg/L dissolved organic carbon. In the same water samples chlorine dioxide, chlorine, and permanganate produced no or only limited AOC. When cyanobacterial cells (Aphanizomenon gracile) were added to the water, an AOC increase was detected with ozone, permanganate, and ferrate, probably due to cell lysis. This was confirmed by the increase of extracellular geosmin, a substance found in the selected cyanobacterial cells. AOC formation by chlorine and chlorine dioxide was not affected by the presence of the cells. The formation of oxalate upon oxidation was found to be a linear function of the oxidant consumption for all five oxidants. The following molar yields were measured in three different water matrices based on oxidant consumed: 2.4-4.4% for ozone, 1.0-2.8% for chlorine dioxide and chlorine, 1.1-1.2% for ferrate, and 11-16% for permanganate. Furthermore, oxalate was formed in similar concentrations as trihalomethanes during chlorination (yield ∼ 1% based on chlorine consumed). Oxalate formation kinetics and stoichiometry did not correspond to the AOC formation. Therefore, oxalate cannot be used as a surrogate for AOC formation during oxidative water treatment. SN - 1879-2448 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/21220144/Formation_of_assimilable_organic_carbon_during_oxidation_of_natural_waters_with_ozone_chlorine_dioxide_chlorine_permanganate_and_ferrate_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0043-1354(10)00829-8 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -