Long-term performance of biological ion exchange for the removal of natural organic matter and ammonia from surface waters

Anionic exchange is an effective treatment option for the removal of natural organic matter from surface waters. However, the management of the spent brine regenerant often limits the adoption of this process. The current study reports one year of operation of ion exchange resins under biological mo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Water research (Oxford) 2018-12, Vol.146, p.1-9
Hauptverfasser: Amini, Nargess, Papineau, Isabelle, Storck, Veronika, Bérubé, Pierre R., Mohseni, Madjid, Barbeau, Benoit
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container_title Water research (Oxford)
container_volume 146
creator Amini, Nargess
Papineau, Isabelle
Storck, Veronika
Bérubé, Pierre R.
Mohseni, Madjid
Barbeau, Benoit
description Anionic exchange is an effective treatment option for the removal of natural organic matter from surface waters. However, the management of the spent brine regenerant often limits the adoption of this process. The current study reports one year of operation of ion exchange resins under biological mode (BIEX, i.e. without regeneration to promote biofilm growth on the media) compared to the performance of (i) ion exchange with weekly regeneration (IEX), (ii) granular activated carbon under biological mode (BAC) and (ii) granular activated carbon under adsorption mode (GAC). Four parallel pilot filters (GAC, BAC, IEX and BIEX) were fed with a colored and turbid river water without pretreatment. Although IEX provided the best performance (80% DOC removal) throughout the study, BIEX achieved a similar performance to IEX prior to DOC breakthrough (92 days) and subsequently achieved a mean DOC removal of 62% in warm water conditions. The GAC filter was rapidly exhausted (2 weeks) while the BAC filter only provided a 5% DOC reduction. Full nitrification was observed on both the BIEX and BAC filters under warm water conditions (>15 °C). After one year of operation, BIEX was successfully regenerated with brine. According to a mass balance, 69% of DOC removal in BIEX was due to ion exchange while we assume the remainder was biodegraded. Operation of ion exchange in biological mode is a promising option to reduce spent brine production while still achieving high DOC removal. [Display omitted] •In the biological IEX filter, DOC breakthrough occurred after 60 days.•After DOC breakthrough, BIEX reduced DOC from 7 mg C/L to 2–3 mg C/L in warm water.•Nitrification in warm water was as efficient in BIEX filters as in BAC filters.•BIEX media was successfully regenerated after 331 days of operation.•NOM removal in BIEX was mostly (69%) due to ion exchange.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.watres.2018.07.057
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subjects Activated carbon
Ammonia
Biological mode
Drinking water
Ion exchange
Natural organic matter
title Long-term performance of biological ion exchange for the removal of natural organic matter and ammonia from surface waters
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