Redox and Disinfection
Redox and Disinfection
Redox and Disinfection
• Each Cr atom that reacts gains 3 e-, so for the given coefficients, 6 e-
are transferred. Each Fe(II) releases only 1 e- when it is converted to
Fe(III), so 6 Fe(II) ions must be oxidized. Thus:
• The reaction has 7 oxygen atoms on the left and 22 on the right. To
balance the oxygen, we add 15 water molecules to the left:
• The total charge on the left is +10, while that on the right is +2.
Adding 8 H+ to the right balances the charge and, as it must, also
balances the H atoms (30 on each side). The final, balanced reaction
is as follows:
- Molecular wt.
e -equiv wt
# of e- transferred in redox reaction
Oxidants Used in Drinking Water Treatment
Oxidant MW Reduced ne * Eq. wt.
O3 48 3H2O 6 8
H 2 O2 34 2H2O 2 17
*ne = moles of e- consumed per mole of oxidant reacting
Quantifying Disinfectant Concentrations
Concentrations of disinfectants are frequently expressed as the
concentration of Cl2 that would have the same oxidizing capacity.
For example, 3 mg/L ClO2 might be expressed as:
HO OH
Free Cl2 reacts with NOM molecules in two ways: (1) oxidation,
generating Cl-, and (2) substitution to form chlorinated organics.
OH
HOOC COOH
Cl
O
HOOC
HO OH
OH
COOH
Cl2 Cl
Cl
O O
OH
Cl- Cl-
O
O
O COOH
O O
HO OH
Consumption of Free Cl2 by Reaction
with NOM and Inorganics
Region 1*
Some Specified Time
for Dose A
Region 4
Region 2
Region 3 1:1
A Cl2 Dose
Cl -R-CCl3
HOCl + Cl Cl
Incorporation of Chlorine into Organics
Cl O Cl O
C C C C
H Cl OH
OH
Cl Cl
Dichloro-acetic Acid Trichloro-acetic Acid
Note: The chlorinated products have the structure of acetic acid, but they
form when part of a chlorinated NOM molecule breaks off, not by addition
of chlorine to pre-existing acetic acid molecules.
Bromination of NOM
If the raw water contains Br-, it gets oxidized to
HOBr by free Cl2, and then can react with NOM
in the same ways that free Cl2 does. As a result,
brominated organics also form:
Cl H O
C H C C
Br H OH
Cl Br
Bromo-Dichloromethane (CHBr3) MonoBromo-acetic Acid
Br Cl O
C H C C
Br Br OH
Br Cl
Bromoform (CHBr3) Bromo-Dichloro-acetic Acid
Reactions of Chlorine with NOM
The total conc’n of Cl and Br that gets incorporated into
organics is referred to as the total organic halogen
concentration, TOX. Identifiable molecules account for
about one-half of the TOX.
Other Identified
TOX (8%)
HAA (19%)
Unidentified
THM (23%)
TOX (50%)
Schematic Summary:
Reactions of Chlorine with NOM
OH
HOOC COOH
THMs Cl-
HO OH
HOOC OH
O
O
OH
O O
COOH
Cl2 Br- Cl
Cl
O
O COOH
Br
O O
Cl- HAAs
HO OH Cl
Regulations for Chlorinated Organics
Maximum Contaminant Levels (MCLs) exist for:
• Total TriHaloMethanes (TTHMs), 80 mg/L
• The sum of five HaloAcetic Acids (HAA5*), 60 mg/L
The first two of the above options are employed fairly commonly.
Approaches to implement the third option have largely been abandoned.
Alternative Disinfectants
• Chloramines (NH2Cl and NHCl2)
– Weaker oxidant than free chlorine; acceptable disinfectant, but higher
doses required than for free Cl2
– Stable; provides a long-term residual for downstream protection
– Forms virtually no halogenated DBPs
– Subject to some biodegradation in presence of O2, especially in warm
water
– Recent evidence suggests it might allow release of very high
concentrations of Pb, if the distribution system has historically been
exposed to free Cl2
Idealized disinfection
curves
•Same disinfection
efficiency (99% here)
achieved by any
combination of C and t
that gives same C0.86t
value.
•C0.86t required for given
disinfection varies
widely for different
organisms
Disinfection: Characteristics
and Regulations
The Chick-Watson Law (1908):
rX -kc c a
X
n
D
rX - kcD cX -k ' cX
PFR: cX ,out cX ,in exp -k ' td cX ,in exp -kcDtd
cX ,out cX ,out k
ln -kcDtd ; log - cDtd
cX ,in cX ,in 2.303
1 1
CMR: c X ,out c X ,in cX ,in
1 k ' td 1 kcD td
cX ,out 1
c X ,in 1 kcD td
k 4.6
PFR: -2 - cD t d ; cD t d
2.303 k
1 1 99
CMR: ; cD t d
100 1 kcD td k
k
# logs of removal CT
2.303
2.303
CT # logs of removal
k
where the second equation indicates the CT required to achieve the
given # of logs of removal
•EPA has regulations about the # of logs of reduction required for
various organisms (Giardia, Crypto, viruses), and has published tables
stating how many logs of “disinfection credit” a utility gets for various
CT values. Some credit is also given for filtration. A utility can manage
its process more or less as it chooses, as long as it accomplishes the
regulated number of logs of removal.
CT values for Giardia and Virus
Inactivation Using Chloramines
Required CT (mg-min/L)
Log Temperature ( C)
Inactivation 5 15 25
Giardia
Viruses