articleEnvironmental Science & TechnologyMay 24, 2003Closed access

Factors Influencing the Formation and Relative Distribution of Haloacetic Acids and Trihalomethanes in Drinking Water

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

PubMed
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Abstract

Various water quality and treatment characteristics were evaluated under controlled chlorination conditions to determine their influences on the formation and distribution of nine haloacetic acids and four trihalomethanes in drinking water. Raw waters were sampled from five water utilities and were coagulated with alum and fractionated with XAD-8 resin. The resulting four fractions--raw and coagulated water and the hydrophobic and hydrophilic extracts--were then chlorinated at pH 6 and 8 and held at 20 degrees C for various contact times. The results show that increasing pH from 6 to 8 increased trihalomethane formation but decreased trihaloacetic acid formation, with little effect on dihaloacetic acid…

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690
total citations
FWCI
6.06
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100%
References
20
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Trihalomethane
  • Haloacetic acids
  • Chemistry
  • Dissolved organic carbon
  • Absorbance
  • Environmental chemistry
  • Water treatment
  • Bromine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Clean water and sanitation
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