Formation of Aluminum Containing Solids in Drinking Water: Influence on Pb/Cu Corrosion, Al Solubility and Enhanced Softening

Aluminum salts are used as the primary coagulants in the majority of United States drinking water treatment plants. Despite decades of practical experience, there are important knowledge gaps regarding the effects of residual Al on distribution system materials as well as specific types of solids fo...

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Main Author: Kvech, Steven Joseph
Other Authors: Environmental Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33810
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06292001-090818/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-338102020-09-26T05:39:00Z Formation of Aluminum Containing Solids in Drinking Water: Influence on Pb/Cu Corrosion, Al Solubility and Enhanced Softening Kvech, Steven Joseph Environmental Engineering Edwards, Marc A. Dietrich, Andrea M. Knocke, William R. coagulation magnesium lead corrosion softening silica copper corrosion aluminum Aluminum salts are used as the primary coagulants in the majority of United States drinking water treatment plants. Despite decades of practical experience, there are important knowledge gaps regarding the effects of residual Al on distribution system materials as well as specific types of solids formed. The first phase of this work examined the formation of aluminosilicate deposits in copper and lead pipes using water from Denver, Colorado. It was anticipated was that these deposits could form barrier films on the pipe, protecting it from corrosion. However, the deposits had slightly detrimental effects on leaching of metal to water, and higher levels of aluminosilicates could further worsen corrosion by-product release. The second phase of work attempted to extend understanding of aluminum solubility controls by accounting for effects of sulfate and formation of solids other than Al(OH)3 during water treatment. Sulfate was found to destabilize small Al(OH)3 colloids resulting in agglomeration into larger flocs from pH 5.0-6.2 . At pH 9.0 and above, Al-Mg, Al-Mg-Si and Al-Si solids were discovered to control Al solubility, while also having significant impacts on the precipitation of calcite in the presence of silica and overall softening effectiveness. This could be of considerable importance to water treatment practice. These solids also had some potential for removal of arsenic, TOC and boron. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:40:47Z 2014-03-14T20:40:47Z 2001-05-10 2001-06-29 2002-07-26 2001-07-26 Thesis etd-06292001-090818 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33810 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06292001-090818/ kvech_ETD.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic coagulation
magnesium
lead corrosion
softening
silica
copper corrosion
aluminum
spellingShingle coagulation
magnesium
lead corrosion
softening
silica
copper corrosion
aluminum
Kvech, Steven Joseph
Formation of Aluminum Containing Solids in Drinking Water: Influence on Pb/Cu Corrosion, Al Solubility and Enhanced Softening
description Aluminum salts are used as the primary coagulants in the majority of United States drinking water treatment plants. Despite decades of practical experience, there are important knowledge gaps regarding the effects of residual Al on distribution system materials as well as specific types of solids formed. The first phase of this work examined the formation of aluminosilicate deposits in copper and lead pipes using water from Denver, Colorado. It was anticipated was that these deposits could form barrier films on the pipe, protecting it from corrosion. However, the deposits had slightly detrimental effects on leaching of metal to water, and higher levels of aluminosilicates could further worsen corrosion by-product release. The second phase of work attempted to extend understanding of aluminum solubility controls by accounting for effects of sulfate and formation of solids other than Al(OH)3 during water treatment. Sulfate was found to destabilize small Al(OH)3 colloids resulting in agglomeration into larger flocs from pH 5.0-6.2 . At pH 9.0 and above, Al-Mg, Al-Mg-Si and Al-Si solids were discovered to control Al solubility, while also having significant impacts on the precipitation of calcite in the presence of silica and overall softening effectiveness. This could be of considerable importance to water treatment practice. These solids also had some potential for removal of arsenic, TOC and boron. === Master of Science
author2 Environmental Engineering
author_facet Environmental Engineering
Kvech, Steven Joseph
author Kvech, Steven Joseph
author_sort Kvech, Steven Joseph
title Formation of Aluminum Containing Solids in Drinking Water: Influence on Pb/Cu Corrosion, Al Solubility and Enhanced Softening
title_short Formation of Aluminum Containing Solids in Drinking Water: Influence on Pb/Cu Corrosion, Al Solubility and Enhanced Softening
title_full Formation of Aluminum Containing Solids in Drinking Water: Influence on Pb/Cu Corrosion, Al Solubility and Enhanced Softening
title_fullStr Formation of Aluminum Containing Solids in Drinking Water: Influence on Pb/Cu Corrosion, Al Solubility and Enhanced Softening
title_full_unstemmed Formation of Aluminum Containing Solids in Drinking Water: Influence on Pb/Cu Corrosion, Al Solubility and Enhanced Softening
title_sort formation of aluminum containing solids in drinking water: influence on pb/cu corrosion, al solubility and enhanced softening
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/33810
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-06292001-090818/
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