Inicio  /  Beverages  /  Vol: 1 Par: 4 (2015)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Using Automated On-Site Monitoring to Calibrate Empirical Models of Trihalomethanes Concentrations in Drinking Water

Thomas E. Watts III    
Robyn A. Snow    
Aaron W. Brown    
J. C. York    
Greg Fantom    
Paul S. Simone Jr. and Gary L. Emmert    

Resumen

An automated, on-site trihalomethanes concentration data set from a conventional water treatment plant was used to optimize powdered activated carbon and pre-chlorination doses. The trihalomethanes concentration data set was used with commonly monitored water quality parameters to improve an empirical model of trihalomethanes formation. A calibrated model was used to predict trihalomethanes concentrations the following year. The agreement between the models and measurements was evaluated. The original model predicted trihalomethanes concentrations within ~10 µg·L-1 of the measurement. Calibration improved model prediction by a factor of three to five times better than the literature model.

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