It is difficult for waterworks that add chlorine into finished water once to maintain sufficient residual chlorine at unfavorable points of the pipe network that supply water for large areas of coverage. Therefore, booster chlorination was employed for a long-distance water distribution system. The study was performed in H City with a water supply system serving about 400 km of downtown and rural areas. The purpose of this work is to obtain the distribution characteristics of disinfection by-products (DBPs) in the booster chlorination disinfection pipe network through uniformly distributed sampling analysis. The results showed that detected DBPs include trichloromethane (TCM), bromodichloromethane (BDCM), dibromochloromethane (DBCM) and tribromomethane (TBM), dichloroacetic acid (DCAA), trichloroacetic acid (TCAA), dichloroacetonitrile (DCAN), bromochloroacetonitrile (BCAN), and trichloronitromethane (TCNM). The concentrations of the regulated DBPs were found to be lower than the standard limits specified in the Sanitary Standard for Drinking Water (GB5749-2006). Before booster chlorination, the average concentrations of the DBPs mentioned (expressed as mean±deviation) were (8.08±3.34), (9.77±2.91), (7.38±4.82), (2.65±2.02), (2.95±3.26), (6.02±6.06), (3.13±2.48), (1.61±2.05), and (0.15±0.10) μg·L, while afterwards, they were increased to (10.30±4.55), (11.73±3.60), (8.23±5.22), (2.95±2.45), (3.29±3.60), (8.15±7.58), (3.31±2.61), (1.33±2.04), and (0.12±0.06) μg·L, respectively. Trihalomethanes (THMs) and haloacetic acids (HAAs) increased by 6.32%-26.60% and 5.32%-42.71%, respectively, after booster chlorination. In addition, raw water quality and seasonal changes had a certain impact on the occurrence of DBPs. The levels of DBPs in summer were generally higher than those in spring or autumn. According to the analysis of DBP formation potential of source water, finished water, and tap water, it was found that the risk of DBPs exceeding the standard limit may exist in the water supply system of H City; therefore, further optimization of the treatment process should be considered to ensure water quality.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.13227/j.hjkx.202001007 | DOI Listing |
Ecotoxicol Environ Saf
November 2024
Research Centre for Carbon Solutions, School of Engineering and Physical Sciences, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh EH14 4AS, United Kingdom. Electronic address:
Water Res
December 2024
Department of Civil, Materials, and Environmental Engineering, The University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA. Electronic address:
Effective disinfection is essential for maintaining water quality standards in distribution networks. Chlorination, as the most used technique, ensures safe water by maintaining sufficient chlorine residuals but also leads to the formation of disinfection byproducts (DBPs). These DBPs pose health risks, highlighting the need for chlorine injection control (CIC) by booster stations to balance safety and DBPs formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioact Mater
December 2024
Department of Laboratory Medicine, Dongguan Institute of Clinical Cancer Research, Dongguan Key Laboratory of Precision Diagnosis and Treatment for Tumors, The Tenth Affiliated Hospital of Southern Medical University (Dongguan People's Hospital), Dongguan, 523058, China.
Low tumor immunogenicity, immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, and bacterial infections have emerged as significant challenges in postsurgical immunotherapy and skin regeneration for preventing melanoma recurrence. Herein, an immunotherapeutic hydrogel booster (GelMA-CJCNPs) was developed to prevent postoperative tumor recurrence and promote wound healing by incorporating ternary carrier-free nanoparticles (CJCNPs) containing chlorine e6 (Ce6), a BRD4 inhibitor (JQ1), and a glutaminase inhibitor (C968) into methacrylic anhydride-modified gelatin (GelMA) dressings. GelMA-CJCNPs reduced glutathione production by inhibiting glutamine metabolism, thereby preventing the destruction of reactive oxygen species generated by photodynamic therapy, which could amplify oxidative stress to induce severe cell death and enhance immunogenic cell death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Bioanal Chem
September 2024
Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology, Überlandstrasse 129, 8600, Dübendorf, Switzerland.
Chlorinated paraffins (CP) are complex molecular mixtures occurring in a wide range of isomers and homologs of environmental hazards, whose analytical complexity demand advanced mass spectrometry (MS) methods for their characterization. The reported formation of chlorinated olefins (COs) and other transformation products during CP biotransformation and degradation can alter the MS analysis, increasing the high resolution required to distinguish CPs from their degradation products. An advanced setup hyphenating a plasma ionization source and an external high-performance data acquisition and processing system to the legacy hybrid LTQ Orbitrap XL mass spectrometer is reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Environ Res
December 2023
Western Sydney University, Penrith, New South Wales, Australia.
EPANET and its commercial derivatives are the most widely-used software packages for modeling free chlorine and its by-products in drinking water distribution systems. Yet, they are not sufficiently accurate, general, or efficient for deriving optimal chlorine dosing strategies at different seasonal temperatures. To overcome EPANET's limitations, an integrated set of rigorously validated multispecies process models are proposed for application within the EPANET-MSX environment.
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