watrdude
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 24, 2002
- 4
My customer, a small municipal water treatment plant laboratory, is detecting ammonia in their BOD test reagent water following a treatment system that includes carbon, RO, DI & UF. We recently switched to calalytic GAC because of different chemistry with monchloramine (the source is right at the plant, 2.5ppm+). My understanding is that reaction with catalytic carbon produces NHCL4 rather than the NH3 and Cl- like normal carbon, and I'm thinking that would be better rejected by the RO. This plant has also been playing with their ammonia and chlorine injection trying to deal with a THM issue so I can't rule out excess free ammonia beyond the monochloramine combination. Water is cold this time of year, don't know if that's a factor. Any ideas on how to beef up this system? I've seen ammonia sorbents, etc. but I already have a ton of equipment on here, hard to believe that carbon,RO,IX combo can't get it.