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N-nitrosomorpholine in potable reuse.

Authors :
Glover, Caitlin M.
Verdugo, Edgard M.
Trenholm, Rebecca A.
Dickenson, Eric R.V.
Source :
Water Research. Jan2019, Vol. 148, p306-313. 8p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Abstract As potable reuse guidelines and regulations continue to develop, the presence of N -nitrosamines is a primary concern because of their associated health concerns. In this study, bench-, pilot-, and full-scale tests were conducted to focus on the occurrence and treatment of N -nitrosomorpholine (NMOR) in United States (U.S.) potable reuse systems. Out of twelve U.S. wastewater effluents collected, ambient NMOR was detected in eleven (average = 20 ± 18 ng/L); in contrast, only two of the thirteen surface water and stormwater samples had NMOR. Across all of these samples maximum formation potential by chloramination produced an average increase of 3.6 ± 1.8 ng/L. This result underscores the need to understand the sources of NMOR as it is not likely a disinfection byproduct and it is not known to be commercially produced within the U.S. At the pilot-scale, three potable reuse systems were evaluated for ambient NMOR with oxidation (i.e., chlorination and ozonation), biofiltration, and granular activated carbon (GAC). Both pre-oxidation and biofiltration were ineffective at mitigating NMOR during long-term pilot plant operation (at least eight-months). GAC adsorbers were the only pilot-scale treatment to remove NMOR; however, complete breakthrough occurred rapidly from <2000 to 10,000 bed volumes. For comparison, a full-scale reverse osmosis (RO) potable reuse system was monitored for a year and confirmed that RO effectively removes NMOR. Systematic bench-scale UV-advanced oxidation experiments were undertaken to assess the mitigation potential for NMOR. At a fluence dose of 325 ± 10 mJ/cm2 , UV alone degraded 90% of the NMOR present. The addition of 5 mg/L hydrogen peroxide did not significantly decrease the UV dose required for one-log removal. These data illustrate that efficient NMOR removal from potable reuse systems is limited to RO or UV treatment. Highlights • Surface waters and wastewaters typically did not form NMOR under chloramination. • Ozone-BAC did not significantly remove NMOR during pilot-plant operation. • Limited sorption of NMOR was observed during GAC pilot-plant operation. • Low pressure UV removed NMOR at doses lower than those required for NDMA. • Significant removal of NMOR in potable reuse is limited to RO or UV treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431354
Volume :
148
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Water Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
133151297
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2018.10.010