Title of article :
Chlorination of model drinking water biofilm: implications for growth and organic carbon removal
Author/Authors :
Phillip W. Butterfield، نويسنده , , Anne K. Camper، نويسنده , , Brian D. Ellis، نويسنده , , Warren L. Jones، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages :
15
From page :
4391
To page :
4405
Abstract :
The influence of chlorine on biofilm in low organic carbon environments typical of drinking water or industrial process water was examined by comparing biomass and kinetic parameters for biofilm growth in a chlorinated reactor to those in a non-chlorinated control. Mixed-population heterotrophic biofilms were developed in rotating annular reactors under low concentration, carbon-limited conditions (<2 mg/L as carbon) using three substrate groups (amino acids, carbohydrates and humic substances). Reactors were operated in parallel under identical conditions with the exception that chlorine was added to one reactor at a dose sufficient to maintain a free chlorine residual of 0.09–0.15 mg/L in the effluent. The presence of free chlorine resulted in development of less biofilm biomass compared to the control for all substrates investigated. However, specific growth and organic carbon removal rates were on the average five times greater for chlorinated biofilm compared to the control. Observed yield values were less for chlorinated biofilm. Although chlorinated biofilmʹs specific organic carbon removal rate was high, the low observed yield indicated organic carbon was being utilized for purposes other than creating new cell biomass. The impacts of free chlorine on mixed-population biofilms in low-nutrient environments were different depending upon the available substrate. Biofilms grown using amino acids exhibited the least difference between control and chlorinated kinetic parameters; biofilm grown using carbohydrates had the greatest differences. These findings are particularly relevant to the fundamental kinetic parameters used in models of biofilm growth in piping systems that distribute chlorinated, low-carbon-concentration water.
Keywords :
kinetic parameters , drinking water , Biofilm , Chlorine
Journal title :
Water Research
Serial Year :
2002
Journal title :
Water Research
Record number :
768708
Link To Document :
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