tipp79
Civil/Environmental
- Nov 3, 2006
- 38
Currently lime water is dosed for final water pH correction at a client's WTW.
This lime water system is unable to achieve the additional pH correction required to counteract a proposed fluoride dose and so sodium hydroxide dosing is required (and is struggling with achieving required pH at the moment at full works' flow). My preference would be to replace the lime water system for a new sodium hydroxide dosing system to achieve the full final water pH correction. However, the client needs to justify doing this over maintaining the lime water and then a smaller sodium hydroxide dosing system. While the client accepts dosing two different chemicals for the same purpose is unconventional, they have requested more justification. There is potential control issues and so the caustic would need to be dosed a certain distance downstream of the lime water.
Does anyone have experience of a WTW where two such chemicals are dosed for the same purpose and are there pitfalls I should be aware of? Thanks
This lime water system is unable to achieve the additional pH correction required to counteract a proposed fluoride dose and so sodium hydroxide dosing is required (and is struggling with achieving required pH at the moment at full works' flow). My preference would be to replace the lime water system for a new sodium hydroxide dosing system to achieve the full final water pH correction. However, the client needs to justify doing this over maintaining the lime water and then a smaller sodium hydroxide dosing system. While the client accepts dosing two different chemicals for the same purpose is unconventional, they have requested more justification. There is potential control issues and so the caustic would need to be dosed a certain distance downstream of the lime water.
Does anyone have experience of a WTW where two such chemicals are dosed for the same purpose and are there pitfalls I should be aware of? Thanks