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Release of nitrogenous disinfection by-product precursors in algae-laden water under UV radiation

Water Science & Technology Water Supply 2020 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Weiliang Pan, Yunpeng Cao, Rui Deng, Rui Deng, Li Gu, Jian Xu, Changlong Ding

Summary

Researchers investigated how UV radiation affects the release of nitrogen-containing organic compounds from algae in drinking water, which can form harmful nitrogenous disinfection by-products (N-DBPs) during water treatment. They found that UV exposure altered the chemical properties of algal metabolites and increased N-DBP precursor release. The study has implications for optimizing UV-based disinfection at treatment plants serving eutrophic water sources.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract Nitrogen-containing organic compounds and nitrogenous disinfection by-products (N-DBPs) in drinking water have attracted attention in the field of water treatment. Metabolites released during algae growth contain a variety of organic nitrogen species, which are called N-DBP precursors. The aim of this paper is to elucidate how N-DBP precursors are released under UV radiation, as well as investigate the variations of their chemical properties. The results show that through UV radiation, the physiological metabolism of algal cells was disordered and the properties of their metabolites were changed. The dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) compound concentration increased rapidly from 5.38 at the beginning to 11.11 mg/L after 30 min of radiation, and then increased steadily from 11.11 to 23.71 mg/L during a further 210 min of radiation. Derivation results of the curves for algae and DON concentration variations shows that when 1 × 1010 algal cells were destroyed, 8.31 mg DON was released into the solution during the first 30 min of radiation. Low dose UV radiation brought a slight decline of the specific N-DBP formation potential due to changes in the extracellular organic matter (EOM) structure without destroying the algal cells, which was conducive to controlling the formation potential of N-DBPs. Long-time UV radiation can bring a significant increase in N-DBP formation potential. After 4 hours of ultraviolet radiation, the total formation potential of N-DBPs in the solution increased from about 84.9 μg/L to about 213.5 μg/L, 2.5 times higher than the initial solution. The N-DBP formation potential increases obviously during the first 10–30 min UV radiation, and then decreases slightly in the subsequent 30–240 min radiation.

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