AWWA ACE58084 PDF

AWWA ACE58084 PDF

Name:
AWWA ACE58084 PDF

Published Date:
06/15/2003

Status:
Active

Description:

Turbidity in Aquifer Storage and Recovery Wells

Publisher:
American Water Works Association

Document status:
Active

Format:
Electronic (PDF)

Delivery time:
10 minutes

Delivery time (for Russian version):
200 business days

SKU:

Choose Document Language:
$7.2
Need Help?
Recovering turbid water from Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR) wells presents problems that can vary in severity according to the origin of the turbid water. In the Atlantic Coastal Plain, recovered water may exhibit elevated turbidity if the storage aquifer naturally produces turbid water, or if the chemistry of the recharge water is incompatible with the water or minerals in the storage aquifer. Analysis of filtrate residue from several ASR sites indicates that clay minerals comprise over 99 percent of the entrained particles causing turbidity. At all sites considered, kaolinite is the most abundant clay mineral in the filtrate by a factor of 2 to 3 times, even though the clay mineral suite in the storage aquifers is dominated by other minerals including illite, smectite, and chlorite. Kaolinite is the dominant clay mineral in filtrate samples irregardless of whether turbidity is naturally produced or induced by ASR operations. Mitigation in naturally turbid storage aquifers requires in situ treatment of the entire operational aquifer storage volume with a calcium, potassium, or aluminum salt solution, or coagulating (alum, organic polymers) agents. In situ treatments result in significant, yet unpredictable degradation in specific capacity of the ASR well. Often treatment of the recovered water at the ground surface by filtration technology is a safer alternative than in situ treatment, that risks bulk destruction of the intrinsic permeability of the storage aquifer. Mitigation of turbidity induced by ASR operations is more easily accomplished than naturally occurring turbidity through simple operational steps. Turbidity can be reduced by correctly adjusting the pH or cation chemistry of the recharge water and controlling pumping rates (flow velocities) upon the initiation of recovery. Extending storage times to several months can also effectively mitigate the turbidity of the recovered water. Includes 2 references, figures.
Edition : Vol. - No.
File Size : 1 file , 750 KB
Note : This product is unavailable in Ukraine, Russia, Belarus
Number of Pages : 10
Published : 06/15/2003

History


Related products

AWWA ACE58085
Published Date: 06/15/2003
Meeting the Challenge of Providing a Reliable Water Supply for the Future, the Groundwater Replenishment System
$7.2
AWWA ACE58102
Published Date: 06/15/2003
Atmospheric Impacts on Source Water Quality
$7.2
AWWA ACE58163
Published Date: 06/15/2003
CFD Design Approach for Chlorine Disinfection Processes
$7.2
AWWA ACE58223
Published Date: 06/15/2003
How Government Affairs, Public Communication and Engineering Can Work Together toward Successful Implementaton of Integrated Water Plans
$7.2

Best-Selling Products

TELCORDIA FR-RTP-1-CD-21-100USERS
Published Date: 02/01/2003
Release to Pivot (RTP) Family of Requirements (RTPFR), FR-RTP-1
TELCORDIA FR-SONET-17-CD-1USER
Published Date: 02/01/2003
Broadband and Transport Network Generic Requirements: SONET and ATM Transport Technologies
TELCORDIA FR-SONET-17-CD-6-20USER
Published Date: 02/01/2003
Broadband and Transport Network Generic Requirements: SONET and ATM Transport Technologies
TELCORDIA GR-1009
Published Date: 11/01/1994
Generic Requirements for Fiber Optic Clip-on Test Sets
TELCORDIA GR-1031
Published Date: 10/01/1997
OTGR Section 15.6: Operations Interfaces Using OSI Tools: Test Access Management
TELCORDIA GR-1042
Published Date: 12/01/1998
Generic Requirements for Operations Interfaces Using OSI Tools - Information Model Overview: Synchronous Optical Network (SONET) Transport Information Model