Potential impacts of changing supply-water quality on drinking water distribution: A review

Gang Liu*, Ya Zhang, Willem Jan Knibbe, Cuijie Feng, Wentso Liu, Gertjan Medema, Walter van der Meer

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

224 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Driven by the development of water purification technologies and water quality regulations, the use of better source water and/or upgraded water treatment processes to improve drinking water quality have become common practices worldwide. However, even though these elements lead to improved water quality, the water quality may be impacted during its distribution through piped networks due to the processes such as pipe material release, biofilm formation and detachment, accumulation and resuspension of loose deposits. Irregular changes in supply-water quality may cause physiochemical and microbiological de-stabilization of pipe material, biofilms and loose deposits in the distribution system that have been established over decades and may harbor components that cause health or esthetical issues (brown water). Even though it is clearly relevant to customers’ health (e.g., recent Flint water crisis), until now, switching of supply-water quality is done without any systematic evaluation. This article reviews the contaminants that develop in the water distribution system and their characteristics, as well as the possible transition effects during the switching of treated water quality by destabilization and the release of pipe material and contaminants into the water and the subsequent risks. At the end of this article, a framework is proposed for the evaluation of potential transition effects.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)135-148
Number of pages14
JournalWater Research
Volume116
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2017

Keywords

  • Destabilization
  • Drinking water distribution
  • Evaluation framework
  • Transition effects
  • Water quality switching

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