Analysis of the influence of rapid filter cycle interruption on filtrate quality

Abstract The article presents research carried out on a sand/anthracite filter in a water treatment plant in Cracow in the south of Poland. These studies show that shutting down the filter after only three hours of operation, setting it aside for four hours and restarting without backwashing did not...

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Main Author: M. Zielina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-09-01
Series:Applied Water Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s13201-021-01489-z
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spelling doaj-a4cd76a5cd5a4ab58a56a9fce0bb4ce12021-09-05T11:22:06ZengSpringerOpenApplied Water Science2190-54872190-54952021-09-011191610.1007/s13201-021-01489-zAnalysis of the influence of rapid filter cycle interruption on filtrate qualityM. Zielina0Faculty of Environmental and Energy Engineering, Cracow University of TechnologyAbstract The article presents research carried out on a sand/anthracite filter in a water treatment plant in Cracow in the south of Poland. These studies show that shutting down the filter after only three hours of operation, setting it aside for four hours and restarting without backwashing did not cause any visible deterioration in the quality of the produced filtrate. Stopping the same filter for four hours, however, after 68 h of operation, visible deterioration in the quality of the filtrate can be observed. After a significant initial deterioration, the quality of the filtrate slowly improved and after a few hours, it reached a level comparable to that before the filter was taken out of service. This was probably the result of characteristic changes in shear stress at the boundary of the deposit and flowing water in the capillaries, which accompanied changes of filtration rate. Decrease in the removal efficiency of coarser particles lasted longer and was greater than that of finer particles. Decrease in particle removal efficiency after restarting the dirty filter was difficult to identify by turbidity measurements, but clearly identifiable by measuring suspended solid concentration and the number of coarser particles. Interrupting the operation of a rapid filter shortly after it has been backwashed should not significantly reduce its efficiency, but after prolonged operation, it may adversely affect the quality of the filtrate.https://doi.org/10.1007/s13201-021-01489-zWater qualityDrinking waterRapid filtrationParticle size
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Zielina
spellingShingle M. Zielina
Analysis of the influence of rapid filter cycle interruption on filtrate quality
Applied Water Science
Water quality
Drinking water
Rapid filtration
Particle size
author_facet M. Zielina
author_sort M. Zielina
title Analysis of the influence of rapid filter cycle interruption on filtrate quality
title_short Analysis of the influence of rapid filter cycle interruption on filtrate quality
title_full Analysis of the influence of rapid filter cycle interruption on filtrate quality
title_fullStr Analysis of the influence of rapid filter cycle interruption on filtrate quality
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the influence of rapid filter cycle interruption on filtrate quality
title_sort analysis of the influence of rapid filter cycle interruption on filtrate quality
publisher SpringerOpen
series Applied Water Science
issn 2190-5487
2190-5495
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract The article presents research carried out on a sand/anthracite filter in a water treatment plant in Cracow in the south of Poland. These studies show that shutting down the filter after only three hours of operation, setting it aside for four hours and restarting without backwashing did not cause any visible deterioration in the quality of the produced filtrate. Stopping the same filter for four hours, however, after 68 h of operation, visible deterioration in the quality of the filtrate can be observed. After a significant initial deterioration, the quality of the filtrate slowly improved and after a few hours, it reached a level comparable to that before the filter was taken out of service. This was probably the result of characteristic changes in shear stress at the boundary of the deposit and flowing water in the capillaries, which accompanied changes of filtration rate. Decrease in the removal efficiency of coarser particles lasted longer and was greater than that of finer particles. Decrease in particle removal efficiency after restarting the dirty filter was difficult to identify by turbidity measurements, but clearly identifiable by measuring suspended solid concentration and the number of coarser particles. Interrupting the operation of a rapid filter shortly after it has been backwashed should not significantly reduce its efficiency, but after prolonged operation, it may adversely affect the quality of the filtrate.
topic Water quality
Drinking water
Rapid filtration
Particle size
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s13201-021-01489-z
work_keys_str_mv AT mzielina analysisoftheinfluenceofrapidfiltercycleinterruptiononfiltratequality
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