Effect of copper oxide on monochloramine decomposition in bromide-containing waters.

Sci Total Environ

Curtin Water Quality Research Centre, School of Molecular and Life Sciences, Curtin University, Perth, WA, Australia. Electronic address:

Published: April 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Copper oxide (CuO) can catalyze the decay of disinfectants used in drinking water, but its effect on monochloramine (NHCl) was previously unknown.
  • In acidic conditions without bromide, NHCl decays slightly in the presence of CuO, but the presence of bromide significantly reduces the total oxidant concentration due to CuO's degradation of bromochloramine (NHBrCl).
  • The rate of NHCl and bromide decomposition is influenced by CuO dosage, bromide concentration, and pH, with a noted apparent second-order rate constant of 0.73 M s for a specific CuO concentration, indicating potential concerns for chloramine stability in copper pipe systems.

Article Abstract

Copper oxide (CuO), a common corrosion product found in copper pipes, has been shown to catalyse the decay of different oxidants in drinking water, including chlorine, bromine, iodine, and chlorine dioxide. However, its impact on monochloramine (NHCl), a disinfectant commonly used in long distribution system worldwide is still unknown. In this study, the effect of CuO on NHCl decay in the absence or presence of bromide was investigated. Results showed that in the presence of CuO and the absence of bromide, NHCl slightly decayed under acidic conditions. When bromide was present in NHCl solutions, the total oxidant concentration (sum of the different bromo-chloro-amines) was significantly decreased by CuO. This was primarily due to the degradation of bromochloramine (NHBrCl) by CuO which was evidenced by membrane inlet mass spectrometry. The decomposition rate of the total oxidant was similar for different CuO dosages (0.02-0.2 g/L) but increased with increasing bromide concentration (0-80 μM) and decreasing pH (6.5-8). An apparent second-order rate constant of 0.73 M s was determined with respect to NHCl and bromide concentrations for a CuO concentration of 0.05 g/L. Our findings suggest that, during water transportation in copper pipes or in distribution systems where copper oxide is present, special attention should be given to the stability of chloramines when bromide-containing waters are chloraminated.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142519DOI Listing

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