Number of the records: 1
Fundamental chemical aspects of coagulation in drinking water treatment – Back to basics
- 1.0578981 - ÚH 2024 RIV NL eng J - Journal Article
Pivokonský, Martin - Novotná, Kateřina - Petříček, Radim - Čermáková, Lenka - Prokopová, Michaela - Načeradská, Jana
Fundamental chemical aspects of coagulation in drinking water treatment – Back to basics.
Journal of Water Process Engineering. Roč. 57, January (2024), č. článku 104660. ISSN 2214-7144. E-ISSN 2214-7144
Grant - others:AV ČR(CZ) StrategieAV21/20; AV ČR(CZ) AP2201
Program: StrategieAV; Akademická prémie - Praemium Academiae
Institutional support: RVO:67985874
Keywords : aluminium sulphate * coagulation * ferric chloride * ferric sulphate * polyaluminium chloride
OECD category: Environmental sciences (social aspects to be 5.7)
Impact factor: 7, year: 2022
Method of publishing: Limited access
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214714423011807
Coagulation is a fundamental process at many drinking water treatment plants (DWTPs) worldwide. It is a long-established water treatment technology but is continuously revisited for the removal of emerging pollutants. Additionally, novel coagulants are being invented and tested. This paper summarises key chemical aspects of coagulation with important implications for current research in this field. To better explain the fundamentals of coagulation, results of coagulation of surface raw water that serves as a DWTP supply are presented. Besides the identification of optimal coagulation conditions that could be recommended for the corresponding DWTP, the results distinctly illustrate the elaborated aspects of coagulation. Those include mainly: (i) the importance of the solution pH, which usually governs the coagulation behaviour of both pollutants and coagulants and is in turn simultaneously affected by them, (ii) the need to assess different coagulants carefully, considering their complete composition and hydrochemical properties, and (iii) the significance of removing not only the target pollutant but also coagulant residuals. In general, this paper contributes to better interconnection between the known fundamentals of coagulation, its current use, and its future prospects.
Permanent Link: https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0348322
Number of the records: 1