Drinking water quality and formation of biofilms in an office building during its first year of operation, a full scale study.

Water Res

Satakunta University of Applied Sciences, Energy and Construction, WANDER Nordic Water and Materials Institute, Sinkokatu 11, FI-26100 Rauma, Finland; Prizztech Ltd. /WANDER Nordic Water and Materials Institute, Sinkokatu 11, FI-26100 Rauma, Finland. Electronic address:

Published: February 2014

Complex interactions existing between water distribution systems' materials and water can cause a reduction in water quality and unwanted changes in materials, aging or corrosion of materials and formation of biofilms on surfaces. Substances leaching from pipe materials and water fittings, as well as the microbiological quality of water and formation of biofilms were evaluated by applying a Living Lab theme i.e. a research in a real life setting using a full scale system during its first year of operation. The study site was a real office building with one part of the building lined with copper pipes, the other with cross-linked polyethylene (PEX) pipes thus enabling material comparison; also differences within the cold and hot water systems were analysed. It was found that operational conditions, such as flow conditions and temperature affected the amounts of metals leaching from the pipe network. In particular, brass components were considered to be a source of leaching; e. g. the lead concentration was highest during the first few weeks after the commissioning of the pipe network when the water was allowed to stagnate. Assimilable organic carbon (AOC) and microbially available phosphorus (MAP) were found to leach from PEX pipelines with minor effects on biomass of the biofilm. Cultivable and viable biomass (heterotrophic plate count (HPC), and adenosine triphosphate (ATP)) levels in biofilms were higher in the cold than in the hot water system whereas total microbial biomass (total cell count (DAPI)) was similar with both systems. The type of pipeline material was not found to greatly affect the microbial biomass or Alpha-, Beta- and Gammaproteobacteria profiles (16s rRNA gene copies) after the first one year of operation. Also microbiological quality of water was found to deteriorate due to stagnation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2013.11.013DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

formation biofilms
12
year operation
12
water
9
water quality
8
office building
8
full scale
8
materials water
8
leaching pipe
8
microbiological quality
8
quality water
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!