DATE: April
21, 2000
CONTACT:
Robin Collins
603-862-1407
WRITER: Virginia
Stuart
603-862-3102
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UNH'S NEW PORTABLE WATER-TESTING
UNIT WILL SAVE TIME AND MONEY FOR PUBLIC WATER SYSTEMS
DURHAM--A water treatment technology center at the
University of New Hampshire has designed and built a new portable
testing unit that could be instrumental in saving tens of thousands
of dollars for small municipal water systems. The new unit will be
put through its paces at the Manchester Water Works over the next
month.
The UNH Water Treatment Technology
Assistance Center (WTTAC), one of nine federally funded centers
in the country, researches and develops innovative water treatment
technologies and then transfers those technologies to engineers and
operators of small public water systems. The WTTAC, which mainly serves
New England, will be one of only five centers to retain funding in
the fall.
The center has been authorized by the Environmental Protection Agency
and the National Sanitation Foundation to act as an independent third
party in testing water filtration units for both manufacturers and
the towns who buy the units. Currently, a town that wants to buy a
new filtration unit must go through a lengthy and costly piloting
process, in which the unit under consideration is tested at the town's
own water works--sometimes for as long as a year. "The portable
testing unit will provide the flexibility to make both pilot and full-scale
evaluations of treatment technologies on site," notes Robin Collins,
center director and professor of civil engineering. "For towns, there
will be the potential to drastically shorten the evaluation process
and save thousands or tens of thousands of dollars. The portable unit
will also help our center be more productive, using and evaluating
more systems." In addition, the portable testing unit could be taken
to individual towns to help diagnose water-quality problems.
The unit consists of two large boards covered with pipes, tubing,
and meters. One board is used to test untreated water coming into
a filtration unit, and the other will test the treated water coming
out. The system can also be challenged by introducing harmless particles
the same size as pathogens that might be found in a water supply.
The results, once approved by the EPA and National Sanitation Foundation,
would give towns verification of the capability of a particular model
of filter. Using this information, a town might be able to forgo the
piloting process entirely or have a much briefer testing period.
The UNH team has taken the portable testing unit to the Manchester
Water Works to observe it in action. "We will take raw water from
the lake, and run it through each of three filtration units, testing
for turbidity, particle counts, pH, temperature, conductivity, and
flow," says project director Mark Arenberg, a graduate student in
civil engineering. Like most of the projects at the center, this one
is a collaboration among UNH researchers, towns, and businesses. The
researchers are testing a membrane filter manufactured by the Pall
Company and two diatomaceous earth filters produced by Sepramantics.
The WTTAC is investigating other innovative technologies, including
river-bank filtration and the combined use of membrane filtration
and ultraviolet light for water treatment. |
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