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Virus Fate and Transport During Recharge Using Recycled Water at a Research Field Site in the Montebello Forebay, Los Angeles County, California, 1997-2000 - Usgs Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5161 (Paperback)
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Virus Fate and Transport During Recharge Using Recycled Water at a Research Field Site in the Montebello Forebay, Los Angeles County, California, 1997-2000 - Usgs Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5161 (Paperback)
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List price R441
Loot Price R406
Discovery Miles 4 060
You Save R35 (8%)
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Total and fecal coliform bacteria distributions in subsurface water
samples collected at a research field site in Los Angeles County
were found to increase from nondetectable levels immediately before
artificial recharge using tertiary-treated municipal wastewater
(recycled water). This rapid increase indicates that bacteria can
move through the soil with the percolating recycled water over
intervals of a few days and vertical and horizontal distances of
about 3 meters. This conclusion formed the basis for three
field-scale experiments using bacterial viruses (bacteriophage) MS2
and PRD1 as surrogates for human enteric viruses and bromide as a
conservative tracer to determine the fate and transport of viruses
in recycled water during subsurface transport under actual recharge
conditions. The research field site consists of a test basin
constructed adjacent to a large recharge facility (spreading
grounds) located in the Montebello Forebay of Los Angeles County,
California. The soil beneath the test basin is predominantly medium
to coarse, moderately sorted, grayish-brown sand. The three tracer
experiments were conducted during August 1997, August-September
1998, and August 2000. For each experiment, prepared solutions of
bacteriophage and bromide were sprayed on the surface of the water
in the test basin and injected, using peristaltic pumps, directly
into the feed pipe delivering the recycled water to the test basin.
Extensive data were obtained for water samples collected from the
test basin itself and from depths of 0.3, 0.6, 1.0, 1.5, 3.0, and
7.6 meters below the bottom of the test basin. The rate of
bacteriophage inactivation in the recycled water, independent of
any processes occurring in the subsurface, was determined from
measurements on water samples from the test basin. Regression
analysis of the ratios of bacteriophage to bromide was used to
determine the attenuation rates for MS2 and PRD1, defined as the
logarithmic reduction in the ratio during each experiment. Although
the inactivation rates increased during the third tracer
experiment, they were nearly two orders of magnitude less than the
attenuation rates. Therefore, adsorption, not inactivation, is the
predominant removal mechanism for viruses during artificial
recharge. Using the colloid-filtration model, the collision
efficiency was determined for both bacteriophage during the second
and third field-scale tracer experiments. The collision efficiency
confirms that more favorable attachment conditions existed for
PRD1, especially during the third tracer experiment. The different
collision efficiencies between the second and third tracer
experiments possibly were due to changing hydraulic conditions at
the research field site during each experiment. The field data
suggest that an optimal management scenario might exist to maximize
the amount of recycled water that can be applied to the spreading
grounds while still maintaining favorable attachment conditions for
virus removal and thereby ensuring protection of the ground-water
supply.
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