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Variability of disinfection by-products at a full-scale treatment plant following rainfall events.

Chemosphere 2017 January
The quality of drinking water sources can decrease when contaminants are transported by overland and subsurface flow and discharged into surface waters following rainfall events. Increases in organic contaminants such as road salts and organic matter may occur and potentially modify disinfection by-products (DBPs) concentration and speciation. This study investigated the effects of various spring rainfall events on the quality of treated waters at a large water treatment plant through the implementation of intensive water quality monitoring of raw, filtered and treated waters during different rainfall events. DBPs (four trihalomethanes and six haloacetic acids) and their explanatory variables (pH, turbidity, water temperature, specific ultraviolet absorbance, total and dissolved organic carbon, bromide and chlorine dose) were measured during four rainfall events. The results showed that water quality degrades during and following rainfall, leading to small increases in trihalomethanes (THM4) and haloacetic acids (HAA6) in treated waters. While THM4 and HAA6 levels remained low during the pre-rainfall period (<9 μg/L) for the four sampling campaigns, small increases in THM4 and HAA6 during and after spring rainfall events were observed. During the rainfall and post-rainfall periods, concentration peaks corresponding to 3-fold and 2-fold increases (respectively 27.5 μg/L for THM4 and 12.6 μg/L for HAA6) compared to pre-rainfall levels were also measured. A slight decrease in harmful brominated THM and HAA proportion was also observed following rainfall events.

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