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Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

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Page 1: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment

1

Natural Organic Matter in Water

David A. ReckhowUniversity of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Page 2: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Outline

2

Intro & DefinitionsNOM Generation

The Hydrologic CycleLand vs Water sourcesCompounds in NOM

Water TreatmentHistorical Types of TreatmentComponents or Processes

Some current issues & popular books

It’s one of my favorite recipes. I call it NOM

2

NOM = Natural Organic MatterDave Reckhow

Page 3: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

What’s in the Water?Natural Substances

Natural Organic Matter (NOM)Inorganic Substances (Iron, Manganese, sodium,

chloride)Anthropogenic Substances

PesticidesOrganic Solvents & Other Industrial CompoundsCarcinogensPharmaceuticalsEndocrine Disrupting CompoundsFlame Retardants

Pathogens and other microorganisms

Dave Reckhow3

Page 4: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

NOM in Natural Waters: Some definitions

4

Groupings Based on Origin

autochthonous compounds are created within the water body

allochthonous compounds can originate from either the soil or from upstream water bodies

aquagenic, substances originating from any water body pedogenic for substances originating from soil

4 Dave Reckhow

Page 5: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Watershed Origins

5

Aquifer

Lake

Upper Soil Horizon

Lower Soil Horizon

Sediment & Gravel in Lake BedSediment & Gravel in Lake Bed

Litter Layer

Algae

5 Dave Reckhow

Page 6: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Watershed Origins

6

Aquifer

Lake

Sediment & Gravel in Lake Bed

Algae

6 Dave Reckhow

Page 7: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Dave Reckhow7

Hydrologic Cycle

Three levelsSurface runoff, overland flow, direct

runoffInterflowInfiltration, percolation, groundwater

flow

D&M, Fig 6-1

Page 8: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Dave Reckhow8http://www.ec.gc.ca/water/images/nature/grdwtr/a5f2e.htm

During dry periods: base flow

Page 9: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

9

NOM: Which is the bigger source?

AutochthonousAquatic plants

or

Allochthonous land plants

Dave Reckhow

Page 10: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

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Aquatic sources: Algae

Scenedesmus quadricaudaScenedesmus quadricauda

Cyclotella sp.Cyclotella sp.~25% from EOM

pH 7, 20-24ºC, chlorine excess

Algae

From: Plummer & Edzwald, 2001 [ES&T:35:3661]

Dave Reckhow

Page 11: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

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Terrestrial Sources: Leaching Experiments

WhitePine

RedMaple

WhiteOak

Darleen Bryan’s study

Dave Reckhow

Page 12: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Leaching of leaves More organic

matter released as the leaves remain submerged

Ultraviolet (UV) absorbance reflects certain types of NOM

100254 xDOC

UVSUVA

Dave Reckhow12

Page 13: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Plant biopolymers

CelluloseLignin

Phenyl-propane units

Cross-linkedRadical

polymerizationIll defined

structureHemicelluloseTerpeniodsProteins

Dave Reckhow13

Page 14: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Tannins, Aromatic Acids and Phenols, cont.

COOH

OH

COOH

OH

OCH3

•Lignin monomers

p-Hydroxybenzoic Acid Vanillic AcidDave Reckhow14

Page 15: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Tannins, Aromatic Acidsand Phenols

About 0.5% of Total Plant Products Likely THM Precursors Source of Color & DBPs

O

HO

HO

HO H

H OH

H

H

OH

OH

OH

CH

CH

CH

H2C

CH2O

OH

O

OH

OC

C

C

O

O

O

HO

HOHO

HO

HOHO

HO

HO

HO

Hydrolyzable Tannin

Condensed Tannin

Gallic Acid monomersGallic Acid monomers

ChemicalSymbols

C C

CC

CC

OHH

H OH

OH

Dave Reckhow15

Page 16: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Carbohydrates empirical formula: Cempirical formula: Cxx(H(H22O)O)yy

OH

OH

H

OH

OH

H

OH

CH2OH

HH

OH

H

OH

OH

OH

CH2OH

HH

O

H

OH

OH

OH

CH2OH

HHO

OH

Glucose (monosaccharide) Cellulose (polysaccharide)

OH

OH

H

OH

NH2

OH

H

CH2OH

HHGlucosamine (amino sugar)

Dave Reckhow16

Page 17: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Fatty Acids

maybe 4% of DOCother mixed acids may account for 2%

H-COOH CH3-COOH CH3-CH2-COOHFormic Acid Acetic Acid Propionic Acid

CH3-CH2-CH2-COOH H3-CH2-CH2-CH2-COOH Butyric Acid Valeric Acid

Common Volatile Fatty Acids in Natural Waters

CH3-COO-

At neutral pH’s most lose H+

Dave Reckhow17

Page 18: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Amino Acids and Proteins

H2C CH

COOH

NH2

HO CH2

CH

NH2

COOH

Tyrosine

Simple Amino AcidsAmine and acid groups

Alanine

Polypeptides & Proteins– Comprised of many

AAs

H2N

NH

HN

O

O

O

NH

HN

O

O

OH

CH3

CH2

CH2

CH2

NH

C

NH2

HN

CH2

N

NH

CH2

CH2

C

OH

O

Dave Reckhow18

Page 19: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

2222 22)

24( N

cOH

baCOO

dbaONHC dcba

NOM Quantification: TOC & DOC

19

Oxidation High Temperature

Pyrolysis UV Irradiation Heated Persulfate UV/Persulfate

PrinciplePrinciple: oxidize all organic matter to Carbon dioxide and water. Then measure the amount of carbon dioxide produced

Filter

Dave Reckhow

Page 20: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Concentrations: Pedogenic

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Land SourcesFrom Woody & non-woody plantsDepends on vegetation, soil, hydrologyMost biodegradable fractions are quickly

lostAttenuated by adsorption to clay soils

Parallel watersheds in Australia (Cotsaris et al., 1994)Clearwater Creek, high clay content: 2.5 mg/L

TOCRedwater Creek, sandy soil: 31.7 mg/L TOC

20 Dave Reckhow

Page 21: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Concentrations: Aquagenic

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Algal & aquatic plant SourcesDepend on nutrient levels / trophic state

Concentrations in Lakes (mg/L) (Thurman, 1985)

Groundwater average: 0.7 mg/LNo algae, much soil attenuation

21 Dave Reckhow

Page 22: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

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John #I: Dr. John Snow

Characterizing “the acute problem”

CholeraFirst emerged

in early 1800s1852-1860: The third cholera pandemic

Snow showed the role of water in disease transmissionLondon’s Broad Street pump (Broadwick St)

Miasma theory was discredited, but it took decades to fully put it to rest

1813-1858

2006

Dave Reckhow

Page 23: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Dave Reckhow23

Cholera in London & Dr. John Snow

During an outbreak of cholera in London in 1854, John Snow plotted on a map the location of all the cases he learned of. Water in that part of London was pumped from wells located in the various neighborhoods. Snow's map revealed a close association between the density of cholera cases and a single well located on Broad Street.

Removing the pump handle of the Broad Street well put an end to the epidemic. This despite the fact that the infectious agent that causes cholera was not clearly recognized until 1905.

John Snow's map showing cholera deaths in London in 1854 (courtesy of The Geographical Journal). The Broad Street well is marked with an X (within the red circle).http://www.ph.ucla.edu/epi/snow.html

Page 24: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

24Picadilly Circus

Soho, Westminster

Page 25: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

John #II: Dr. John L. Leal

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Solutions to “the acute problem”Jersey City’s Boonton ReservoirLeal experimented with chlorine,

its effectiveness and productionGeorge Johnson & George Fuller worked with Leal and

designed the system (1908)

“Full-scale and continuous implementation of disinfection for the first time in Jersey City, NJ ignited a disinfection revolution in the United States that reverberated around the world”

M.J. McGuire, JAWWA 98(3)123

1858-1914

Dave Reckhow

Page 26: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

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Chlorination

1-2 punch of filtration & chlorination

Melosi, 2000, The Sanitary City, John Hopkins Press

Greenberg, 1980, Water Chlorination, Env. Impact & Health Eff., Vol 3, pg.3, Ann Arbor Sci.

US Death Rates for Typhoid Fever

Dave Reckhow

Page 27: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Dave Reckhow27

Today’s Conventional Treatment

Coagulation & solids separationUse of alum or another chemical coagulantrapid mix, flocculation, settling, filtration

Disinfectionincluding clearwell for contact time

Most common sequence for surface water

Dist.Sys.Clear

well

Coagulant Disinfectant

Settling

Corrosion Control Fluoride

raw water flocculationrapidmix

Filtration

Removes some of the NOM & suspended particles

Kills or inactivates pathogenic organisms

Page 28: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Coagulation chemistry

2 4 3-

3 42-Fe ( SO ) + 6 OH 2Fe(OH ) + 3 SO

Ferric Sulfate

Alum

Al SO H O Al OH SO H H O2 4 3 2 3 42

218 2 3 6 12( ) ( )

Mechanisms• Precipitation of metal hydroxide, then:

• Adsorption of contaminants• Enmeshment of particles

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Page 29: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

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NOM removal by alum coagulation

Impacts of pH and dose

Mn precipitationRennes IV Raw Water(France) 11/19/84

Reckhow & Bourbigot (unpublished data)

Page 30: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Dave Reckhow30

FlocculationAn Empty full-scale rectangular flocculation

tank in Southern CA

MWDSCWeymouth Plant

12 Dec 05

Can be done in the lab by slowly mixing your sample with a stirrer or on a shaking table

Page 31: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

31

SettlingCircular and

rectangular designs

Can be done in the lab by letting your sample sit in a jar quiescently

MWDSCWeymouth Plant

12 Dec 05

Page 32: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

FiltrationSand media

Empty filter, not in service (Cincinnati)

32 Dave Reckhow

Page 33: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Chlorination

Chlorine tanksLeft side is

currently feedingRight side is on

reserveDave Reckhow33

Page 34: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Dave Reckhow34

Other Types: Ozone PlantsMany types

Simplest type: ozone, non-filtration shown belowexamples: MWRA (Boston), Portland ME

More complex: including coagulation & Filtrationexamples: Andover MA, Amherst MA

Always includes final disinfection with chlorine or chloramines

Dist.Sys.

Cl2 Cl2 NH3

O3

Page 35: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

OzoneGeneratorDiffusers

35

Can be done in the lab with a $70 fish tank sized ozone generator

Page 36: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Waterloo, Ont

36

Ultraviolet Light

Page 37: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Membrane Treatment

National City, CA

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Page 38: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

38

John #III: John Rook

Chlorine: “the chronic problem”Brought headspace

analysis from the beer industry to drinking water

Found trihalomethanes (THMs) in finished water Carcinogens !?!

Published in Dutch journal H2O, Aug 19, 1972 issue

Deduced that they were formed as byproducts of chlorination

Proposed chemical pathwaysRook, 1974, Water Treat. & Exam., 23:234

1921-2010

Page 39: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Reactions with Disinfectants: Chlorine

39

HOCl + natural organics (NOM)

Oxidized NOMand inorganic chloride

•Aldehydes

Chlorinated Organics•TOX•THMs•HAAs

Cl

Cl

Cl C H

Br

Cl

Cl C HBr

Cl

Br C H

Br

Br

Br C H

Chloroform Bromodichloromethane ChlorodibromomethaneBromoform

The THMsThe THMs

The Precursors!

Page 40: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

a

40

Hours of transit timefrom the water filtration plant

to your house

Page 41: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow
Page 42: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Inhalation in the shower produces highest blood level and response is fast

42

Gordon et al., 2006 [Env. Health Persp.114:514-521]

Multiple Routes of Exposure

Page 43: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

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Epidemiology

137,000 at risk in US?

“I think you should be more explicit here in step two”

Bladder CancerDBPs linked to 9,300 US cases

every yearOther Cancers

Rectal, colonReproductive &

developmental effectsNeural tube defectsMiscarriages & Low birth

weightCleft palate

OtherKidney & spleen disordersImmune system problems,

neurotoxic effects

Page 44: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Observational:The DBP Iceberg

HalogenatedCompounds Non-halogenatedNon-halogenated

CompoundsCompounds

ICR CompoundsICR Compounds

50 MWDSC DBPs50 MWDSC DBPs

~700 Known DBPs~700 Known DBPs

THMs, THAAs

DHAAs

Stuart Krasner

Susan Richardson

Page 45: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

AnotherSandra Hempel

Journalist2007 publication

dateSimilar in many

ways to Johnson’s book

45 Dave Reckhow

Page 46: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

BiographyA serious biography

2003 publicationPrimarily written by MDs

46 Dave Reckhow

Page 47: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Cholera & beyondRobert Morris

Environmental epidemiologist

2007 publication date

More comprehensiveCholera to DBPs to

Crypto

47 Dave Reckhow

Page 48: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

Lead Hazards2006 publication

dateWerner Troesken

Professor of History

Presents many historical lessons on society’s failure to balance public health with profit

48 Dave Reckhow

Page 49: Formation in Watersheds and Removal in Water Treatment 1 Natural Organic Matter in Water David A. Reckhow University of Massachusetts Dave Reckhow

The End

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NOM HC Cl

Cl

Cl

49 Dave Reckhow