Cyanide occurs in many industrial and municipal wastewaters and is
often an expected constituent of typical treatment plant wastewater
streams. However, a growing number of wastewater treatment plants
(WWTPs) across the USA have detected cyanide in cholorinated
effluents at levels exceeding influent concentrations. Because
water quality criteria and related discharge limits are typically
low some of these WWTPs periodically exceed effluent cyanide
standards. Potential causes include cyanide formation during
wastewater cholrination processes, the presence of interferences
that cause false negatives, and false positives caused by artifacts
of sample handling or analytical techniques. The possible causes of
the apparent cyanide formation phenomenon were investigated in this
study. This publication can also be purchased and downloaded via
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