Influence of physical and water quality parameters on residual chlorine decay in water distribution network
Loading...
Date
2024-05-07
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Heliyon
Abstract
Chlorine is the most common disinfectant in drinking water distribution practice. World Health
Organization recommends 0.2–5.0 mg/l of residual chlorine in drinking water. This paper
analyzed influence of physical and water quality parameters on chlorine decay in drinking water
distribution. Principal component analysis, directed tree and regression were used to investigate
influence of these parameters on chlorine from water treatment plant to water consumption
points. Results show that initial chlorine, electrical conductivity and distance explain 62 % of
chlorine decay with estimated error of 0.045 mg/l. The decision-tree feature importance scores of
initial chlorine and electrical conductivity were 0.47 and 0.23 respectively. The combined feature
importance scores of physical parameters of distance (0.09), pipe diameter (0.06), flow velocity
(0.03), pressure (0.02) and travel time (0.046) were less than that for initial chlorine concen-
tration (0.47) alone. These results show that conventional chlorination at water treatment plants
removes largely fast inorganic reactants leaving traces of slow organic reactants as the dominant
secondary contaminants in water distribution system. The key policy recommendation is to use
water quality parameters more than physical parameters in order to enable water utility man-
agers maintain residual chlorine within safe public health standards.
Description
Keywords
Chlorine decay, Physical parameters, Water parameters, Regression analysis, Water quality
Citation
Kwio-Tamale, J. C., & Onyutha, C. (2024). Influence of physical and water quality parameters on residual chlorine decay in water distribution network. Heliyon, e30892.