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1.
Environ Sci Technol ; 46(24): 13220-6, 2012 Dec 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23151024

ABSTRACT

Evaluating the performance of typical water treatment UV reactors is challenging due to the complexity in assessing spatial and temporal variation of UV fluence, resulting from highly unsteady, turbulent nature of flow and variation in UV intensity. In this study, three-dimensional laser-induced fluorescence (3DLIF) was applied to visualize and quantitatively analyze a lab-scale UV reactor consisting of one lamp sleeve placed perpendicular to flow. Mapping the spatial and temporal fluence delivery and MS2 inactivation revealed the highest local fluence in the wake zone due to longer residence time and higher UV exposure, while the lowest local fluence occurred in a region near the walls due to short-circuiting flow and lower UV fluence rate. Comparing the tracer based decomposition between hydrodynamics and IT revealed similar coherent structures showing the dependency of fluence delivery on the reactor flow. The location of tracer injection, varying the height and upstream distance from the lamp center, was found to significantly affect the UV fluence received by the tracer. A Lagrangian-based analysis was also employed to predict the fluence along specific paths of travel, which agreed with the experiments. The 3DLIF technique developed in this study provides new insight on dose delivery that fluctuates both spatially and temporally and is expected to aid design and optimization of UV reactors as well as validate computational fluid dynamics models that are widely used to simulate UV reactor performances.


Subject(s)
Lasers , Ultraviolet Rays , Water Purification/instrumentation , Water Purification/methods , Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation , Fluorescence , Levivirus/physiology , Levivirus/radiation effects , Time Factors , Virus Inactivation/radiation effects
2.
Water Res ; 45(13): 3855-62, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21612811

ABSTRACT

Three-dimensional laser-induced fluorescence (3DLIF) was applied to visualize and quantitatively analyze mixing in a lab-scale UV reactor consisting of one lamp sleeve placed perpendicular to flow. The recirculation zone and the von Karman vortex shedding that commonly occur in flows around bluff bodies were successfully visualized. Multiple flow paths were analyzed by injecting the dye at various heights with respect to the lamp sleeve. A major difference in these pathways was the amount of dye that traveled close to the sleeve, i.e., a zone of higher residence time and higher UV exposure. Paths away from the center height had higher velocities and hence minimal influence by the presence of sleeve. Approach length was also characterized in order to increase the probability of microbes entering the region around the UV lamp. The 3DLIF technique developed in this study is expected to provide new insight on UV dose delivery useful for the design and optimization of UV reactors.


Subject(s)
Fluorescence , Lasers , Ultraviolet Rays , Water Purification/methods , Hydrodynamics
3.
Water Res ; 45(3): 1063-70, 2011 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21126749

ABSTRACT

A sequential application of UV as a primary disinfectant with and without H(2)O(2) addition followed by free chlorine as secondary, residual disinfectant was performed to evaluate the synergistic inactivation of selected indicator microorganisms, MS-2 bacteriophage and Bacillus subtilis spores. No synergism was observed when the UV irradiation treatment was followed by free chlorine, i.e., the overall level of inactivation was the same as the sum of the inactivation levels achieved by each disinfection step. With the addition of H(2)O(2) in the primary UV disinfection step, however, enhanced microbial inactivation was observed. The synergism was observed in two folds manners: (1) additional inactivation achieved by hydroxyl radicals generated from the photolysis of H(2)O(2) in the primary UV disinfection step, and (2) damage to microorganisms in the primary step which facilitated the subsequent chlorine inactivation. Addition of H(2)O(2) in the primary disinfection step was also found to be beneficial for the degradation of selected model organic pollutants including bisphenol-A (endocrine disruptor), geosmin (taste and odor causing compound) and 2,4-D (herbicide). The results suggest that the efficiency of UV/free chlorine sequential disinfection processes, which are widely employed in drinking water treatment, could be significantly enhanced by adding H(2)O(2) in the primary step and hence converting the UV process to an advanced oxidation process.


Subject(s)
Bacillus subtilis/drug effects , Bacillus subtilis/radiation effects , Chlorine/pharmacology , Hydrogen Peroxide/pharmacology , Spores, Bacterial/drug effects , Spores, Bacterial/radiation effects , Ultraviolet Rays , Disinfectants/pharmacology , Kinetics
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