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Ferrous ions, nitrites, hydrogen sulfide, and various organic molecules exert a demand for oxidizing disinfectants such as chlorine. The bulk of the nonparticulate organic material in raw water occurs as naturally derived humic substances, i.e., humic, fulvic, and hymatomelanic acids, which contribute to color in water. The structure of these molecules is not yet fully understood. However, they are known to be polymeric and to contain aromatic rings and carboxyl, phenolic, alcoholic hydroxyl, and methoxyl functional groups. Humic substances, when reacting with and consuming applied chlorine, produce chloroform (CHCl3) and other THM's. Water, particularly surface waters, may also contain synthetic organic molecules whose demand for disinfectant will be determined by their structure. Ammonia and amines in raw water will react with chlorine to yield chloramines that do have some biocidal activity, unlike most products of these side reactions. If chlorination progresses to the breakpoint, i.e., to a free-chlorine residual, these chloramines will be oxidized causing more added chlorine to be consumed before a specific free-chlorine level is achieved. This phenomenon is discussed more fully below.


Unfortunately, Butterfield et al. (1943) lifted their cells from agar slants but failed to wash them in demand-free water. The cells probably carried trace amounts of albumenoid nitrogen from the slants to the test flasks, thereby creating the small chlorine demand that the investigators had tried so carefully to avoid. The effect of such a trace amount of chlorine demand would be most apparent in test solutions with very low chlorine levels. In studies using approximately 0.1 mg/liter or less free chlorine at decreasing pH values, Butterfield et al. (1943) observed that the disinfection of the organisms required a very long time. This might indicate interference at the low levels due to the formation of combined chlorine.


In carefully conceived studies, Esposito et al. (1974) examined the destruction rates of test organisms in contact with dichloramine in demand-free phthalate buffer at pH 4.5 and 15C. Figure II-4 shows the comparisons that were made among enteroviruses (poliovirus 1 and coxsackievirus A9), the bacteriophage ΦX-174, and E. coli (ATCC 11229).


Generally, enteroviruses are more resistant to free chlorine than are the enteric bacteria (Chang, 1971; Clarke and Kabler, 1954; Scarpino et al., 1972). For example, in what was probably the first well-defined study, Clarke and Kabler (1954) used purified coxsackievirus A2 to investigate viral inactivation in water by free chlorine. They carefully controlled their free chlorine residuals with a modified form of the orthotolidine test to determine total chlorine and an orthotolidine-arsenite method for free chlorine. (Combined chlorine was then calculated as the difference between "total" and "free" chlorine readings.) They measured virus recoveries by using suckling mice and the LD50 quantitation procedure. Their results indicated that inactivation times for the virus increased with increasing pH (6.9 to 9.0), decreasing temperatures (27C-29C to 3C-6C), and decreasing total chlorine concentration. They estimated that approximately 7 to 46 times as much free chlorine was required to obtain comparable inactivation of coxsackievirus A2 as was required for a suspension of E. coli cells (Butterfield et al., 1943). For instance, Butterfield et al. (1943) found that at pH 7.0 and at 2C to 5C, 99.9% of E. coli cells were inactivated in 5 min with 0.03 mg/liter of free chlorine. At approximately the same pH and temperature ranges, Clarke and Kabler (1954) observed 99.6% inactivation of coxsackievirus A2 in 5 min with 1.4 mg/liter of free chlorine, i.e., 46 times as much free chlorine as that required to inactivate E. coli cells. At a pH of 8.5 at 25C, 99.9% of E. coli cells were inactivated in 3 min with 0.14 mg/liter of free chlorine (Butterfield et al., 1943), while at a pH of 9.0 at 27C to 29C, 99.6% of the virus was inactivated in 3 min by 1.0 mg/liter of free chlorine. Thus, Clarke and Kabler's work showed that 7 times as much free chlorine was required to inactivate the test coxsackievirus compared to the time necessary to kill the bacterium E. coli. In a subsequent study, Clarke et al. (1956) found that adenovirus type 3, E. coli, and Salmonella typhi were all inactivated or destroyed at approximately the same concentration of free chlorine.


Liu et al. (1971) studied the manner in which 20 strains of human enteric viruses responded to free chlorine. They used Potomac River water that had been partially treated by coagulation with alum and filtration through sand. Chlorine was added to the water at one dosage, 0.5 mg/liter. The final pH was 7.8. They stored the sample at 2C. There was a wide range of resistance to chlorine by the viruses. The most sensitive virus was reovirus type 1, which required 2.7 min for inactiving 4 logs (99.99%) of the virus with 0.5 mg/liter of free chlorine. The most resistant, as judged by extrapolating the experimental data, was poliovirus 2, which required 40 min for the same degree of inactivation. Using actual experimental data, the most resistant virus was echovirus 12, which required a contact time of greater than 60 min for 99.99% inactivation. Liu et al. (1971) concluded from their extrapolated values that the reoviruses were the least resistant to chlorine treatment, that both adenoviruses and echoviruses were less resistant, and that the polioviruses and coxsackieviruses were the most resistant. However, assuming a 20-min contact time, most of the viruses tested at pH 7.8 and 2C would have been 99.99% inactivated with a free chlorine residual of 0.5 mg/liter.


Viral inactivation rates with chloramines have been found to be much slower than with free chlorine. For example, Kelly and Sanderson (1958) studied the effects of chlorine on several enteric viruses. They reported that at pH 7 at 25C-28C, 0.2-0.3 mg/liter free chlorine inactivated 99.9% of all test viruses in 8 min. At the same temperature and pH, combined chlorine at 0.7 mg/liter and at least 4 hr of contact time were needed to achieve 99.7% inactivation of the test viruses.


Recently, Stringer et al. (1975) reported on comparative studies of the cysticidal efficacy of chlorine, bromine, and iodine as disinfectants. Using chlorine gas bubbled into buffered distilled water as stock, they obtained 99.9% cyst inactivation (as measured by excystment capability) after 15 min exposure to 2 mg/liter free chlorine in "clean water" at pH 6. However at pH 8 a contact time exceeding 60 min was required to achieve 99% mortality. In "secondary treated sewage effluent," Stringer et al. considered 13.7 mg/liter chlorine at pH 8 to be ineffectual as a cysticide.


In dose-response experiments in distilled water for exposures of 10 min and at pH levels from pH 4 to pH 10, bromine was found by Stringer et al. (1975) to be the most effective and fastest acting of the halogens tested over the widest pH range. At pH 4, 99.9% cyst mortality was obtained with 1.5 mg/liter of free bromine residual; whereas 2 mg/liter of chlorine and 5 mg/liter of iodine were required to attain the same mortality. Furthermore, increases in pH seemed to have less effect on the cysticidal efficacy of bromine as compared with the other halogens. At pH 10, 99.9% mortality was obtained with residuals of 4 mg/liter of bromine, 12 mg/liter of chlorine, and 20 mg/liter of iodine. 2ff7e9595c


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