Affiliation:
1. Environmental Engineering Program, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Indiana, Pennsylvania 15705, USA
Abstract
Abstract
Trial-and-error chlorination as a conventional practice for swimming pool water disinfection may fail to consistently maintain the pool's residual chlorine within regulatory limits. This study explored the variability of residual chlorine and other common water quality parameters of two sample swimming pools and examined the potential of using a mass balance model for proactive determination of chlorine consumption to better secure the hygienic safety of bathers. A lightly loaded Pool 1 with a normalized bather load of 0.038 bather/m3/day and a heavily loaded Pool 2 with a normalized bather load of 0.36 bather/m3/day showed great variances in residual free and combined chlorine control by trial-and-error methods due to dynamic pool uses. A mass balance model based on chemical and physical chlorine consumption mechanisms was found to be statistically valid using field data obtained from Pool 1. The chlorine consumption per capita coefficient was determined to be 4120 mg/bather. The predictive method based on chlorine demand has a potential to be used as a complementary approach to the existing trial-and-error chlorination practices for swimming pool water disinfection. The research is useful for pool maintenance to proactively determine the required chlorine dosage for compliance of pool regulations.
This article has been made Open Access thanks to the generous support of a global network of libraries as part of the Knowledge Unlatched Select initiative.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Waste Management and Disposal,Water Science and Technology
Reference24 articles.
1. Seasonal dynamics of water and air chemistry in an indoor chlorinated swimming pool;Water Res.,2015
2. What bathers put into a pool: a critical review of body fluids and a body fluid analog;Int. J. Aquat. Res. Educ.,2014
3. Violations identified from routine swimming pool inspections – selected states and counties, United States, 2008;Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC);MMWR Morb. Mortal. Wkly Rep.,2010
4. Disinfection byproducts in swimming pool: occurrences, implications and future needs;Water Res.,2014
5. Effects of UV-dechloramination of swimming pool water on the formation of disinfection by-products: a lab-scale study;Microchem. J.,2014
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献