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Insight into mixed chlorine/chloramines conversion and associated water quality variability in drinking water distribution systems

  • Renjie Pan
  • , Tian Yang Zhang
  • , Zheng Xiong Zheng
  • , Jian Ai
  • , Tao Ye
  • , Heng Xuan Zhao
  • , Chen Yan Hu
  • , Yu Lin Tang
  • , Jing Jing Fan
  • , Bing Geng
  • , Bin Xu
  • Tongji University
  • Shanghai University of Electric Power

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Mixed chlorine/chloramines are common in drinking water distribution systems (DWDSs); however, their transformation and impact on chemical and microbial characteristics are not well understood. We systematically investigated water quality parameters associated with mixed chlorine/chloramine species conversion in 192 samples (including raw, finished, and tap water) collected throughout the year in a city in East China. Various chlorine/chloramine species (free chlorine, monochloramine [NH2Cl], dichloramine [NHCl2], and organic chloramines [OC]) were detected in both chlorinated and chloraminated DWDSs. NHCl2 + OC increased with transport distance along the pipeline network. The maximum proportion of NHCl2 + OC in over total chlorine in tap water reached 66 % and 38 % from chlorinated and chloraminated DWDSs, respectively. Both free chlorine and NH2Cl showed a rapid decay in the water pipe systems, but NHCl2 and OC were more persistent. Correlations between chlorine/chloramine species and physicochemical parameters were established. Models for predicting the sum of chloroform/TCM, bromodichloromethane/BDCM, chlorodibromomethane/CBDM, and bromoform/TBM (THM4) (R2 = 0.56) and haloacetic acids (HAAs) (R2 = 0.65) exhibited greater accuracy based on machine learning tuned with chlorine/chloramine species, particularly NHCl2 + OC. The predominant bacterial communities in mixed chlorine/chloramine systems were those resistant to chlorine or chloramine such as proteobacteria. NH2Cl was the most significant explanatory factor (28.1 %) for the variation in microbial community assemblage in chloraminated DWDSs. Although residual free chlorine and NHCl2 + OC, accounted for a smaller proportion of chlorine species in chloraminated DWDSs, they played an essential role (12.4 % and 9.1 %, respectively) in the microbial community structure.

Original languageEnglish
Article number163297
JournalScience of the Total Environment
Volume880
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jul 2023

Keywords

  • Disinfection byproducts
  • Drinking water distribution systems
  • Microbial community
  • Mixed chlorine/chloramine

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