Abstract
In drinking water treatment, low-turbidity water (e.g., < 5 NTU) is often purified by direct filtration comprising coagulation, flocculation, and rapid sand filtration. This study assessed the potential of replacing the rapid sand filter with a fixed-bed ion exchange column. Two types of anion exchange resins, polyacrylic (Purolite A860) and polystyrene (Purolite A502PS), were used in fixed-bed columns without preceding coagulation and flocculation. After the first use of the new resins (14-h operation), the A860 column showed more significant head loss buildup than the A502PS column (151 and 101 cm, respectively). This can be attributed to the effective size of A860 resins (0.38 mm), which was smaller than that of A502PS resins (0.52 mm). A860 resins were superior to A502PS resins in filtrate quality. The A860 resins achieved filtrate turbidity (0.16–0.26 NTU) lower than the A502PS resins (0.19–0.35 NTU). Similarly, dissolved organic carbon removal by A860 resins (25–37 %) was higher than that by A502PS resin (15–25 %) due to the low hydrophobicity of the feed water. Air scouring and water backwashing were ineffective in regenerating A860 resins. In contrast, cleaning with a NaCl solution (pH = 12) partially recovered the capacity of A860 resins for turbidity removal.
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