Deposition of manganese in a drinking water distribution system

Author:

Sly L I1,Hodgkinson M C1,Arunpairojana V1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Brisbane, Australia.

Abstract

The deposition of manganese in a water distribution system with manganese-related "dirty water" problems was studied over a 1-year period. Four monitoring laboratories with Robbins biofilm sampling devices fitted to the water mains were used to correlate the relationship among manganese deposition, the level of manganese in the water, and the chlorination conditions. Manganese deposition occurred by both chemical and microbial processes. Chemical deposition occurred when Mn(II) not removed during water treatment penetrated the filters and entered the distribution system, where it was oxidized by chlorine and chlorine dioxide used for disinfection. Microbial deposition occurred in areas with insufficient chlorination to control the growth of manganese-depositing biofilm. At 0.05 mg of Mn(II) per liter, the chemical deposition rate was much greater than microbial deposition. Significant deposition occurred at 0.03 mg of manganese per liter, and dirty water complaints were not eliminated until manganese levels were continuously less than 0.02 mg/liter and chlorination levels were greater than 0.2 mg/liter. A guideline level of 0.01 mg of manganese per liter is recommended.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference25 articles.

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4. Hart B. T. 1974. A compilation of Australian water quality criteria. Australian Water Resources Council technical paper no. 7. Australian Government Publishing Office Canberra.

5. Experiences with manganese in Queensland water supplies;Loos E. T.;Water,1987

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