Evaluating Treatment Requirements for Recycled Water to Manage Well Clogging during Aquifer Storage and Recovery: A Case Study in the Werribee Formation, Australia

被引:3
|
作者
Vanderzalm, Joanne L. [1 ]
Page, Declan W. [1 ]
Barry, Karen E. [1 ]
Gonzalez, Dennis [1 ]
机构
[1] CSIRO Land & Water, Locked Bag 2, Glen Osmond, SA 5064, Australia
关键词
aquifer storage and recovery (ASR); managed aquifer recharge (MAR); well injection; well clogging; recycled water; ASR; MECHANISMS; CARBON; SOILS;
D O I
10.3390/w12092575
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Managed aquifer recharge (MAR) is the intentional recharge of water to suitable aquifers for subsequent beneficial use or to achieve environmental benefits. Well injection techniques for MAR, such as Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR), rely on implementing appropriate design and defining the operational parameters to minimise well clogging and maintain sustainable rates of recharge over the long term. The purpose of this study was to develop water quality targets and pre-treatment requirements for recycled water to allow sustained recharge and recovery in a medium-coarse siliceous aquifer. The recharge water is a blend of 40% Class A recycled water and 60% reverse osmosis (RO)-treated Class A recycled water. Four source waters for MAR were evaluated: (1) this blend with no further treatment, and this blend with additional treatment using: (2) a 20 mu m sediment cartridge filter, (3) a 5 mu m sediment cartridge filter, or (4) a 5 mu m granular activated carbon (GAC) cartridge filter. All four treatment options were also further disinfected with chlorine. The four blended and treated recycled waters were used in laboratory columns packed with aquifer material under saturated conditions at constant temperature (20.7 degrees C) with light excluded for up to 42 days. Substantial differences in the changes in hydraulic conductivity of the columns were observed for the different treatments within 14 days of the experiment, despite low turbidity (<2 NTU) of the blend waters. After 14 days, the GAC-treated water had a 7% decline in hydraulic conductivity, which was very different from the other three blend waters, which had declines of 39-52%. Based on these results and consistent with previous studies, a target biodegradable dissolved organic carbon (BDOC) level of <0.2 mg/L was recommended to ensure a biologically stable source of water to reduce clogging during recharge.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 12 条
  • [1] Evaluating treatment requirements for recycled water to manage well clogging during aquifer storage and recovery: A case study in the werribee formation, Australia
    Vanderzalm J.L.
    Page D.W.
    Barry K.E.
    Gonzalez D.
    Water (Switzerland), 2020, 12 (09):
  • [2] Clogging Issues with Aquifer Storage and Recovery of Reclaimed Water in the Brackish Werribee Aquifer, Melbourne, Australia
    Stuyfzand, Pieter J.
    Osma, Javier
    WATER, 2019, 11 (09)
  • [3] Determining treatment requirements for turbid river water to avoid clogging of aquifer storage and recovery wells in siliceous alluvium
    Page, Declan
    Vanderzalm, Joanne
    Miotlinski, Konrad
    Barry, Karen
    Dillon, Peter
    Lawrie, Ken
    Brodie, Ross S.
    WATER RESEARCH, 2014, 66 : 99 - 110
  • [4] Loopholes in the current reclaimed water quality standards for clogging control during aquifer storage and recovery in China
    Fan, Wei
    Yang, Xianpeng
    Wang, Yang
    Huo, Mingxin
    WATER CYCLE, 2020, 1 : 13 - 18
  • [5] Determining treatment requirements for turbid river water to avoid clogging of aquifer storage and recovery wells in siliceous alluvium (vol 66, pg 99, 2014)
    Page, Declan
    Vanderzalm, Joanne
    Miotlinski, Konrad
    Barry, Karen
    Dillon, Peter
    Lawrie, Ken
    Brodie, Ross S.
    WATER RESEARCH, 2016, 101 : 640 - 641
  • [6] Prevention of well clogging during aquifer storage of turbid tile drainage water rich in dissolved organic carbon and nutrients
    Kruisdijk, Emiel
    Ros, Julian F. F.
    Ghosh, Devanita
    Brehme, Maren
    Stuyfzand, Pieter J. J.
    van Breukelen, Boris M. M.
    HYDROGEOLOGY JOURNAL, 2023, 31 (03) : 827 - 842
  • [7] Isotope evolution and contribution to geochemical investigations in aquifer storage and recovery: a case study using reclaimed water at Bolivar, South Australia
    La Salle, CLG
    Vanderzalm, J
    Hutson, J
    Dillon, P
    Pavelic, P
    Martin, R
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2005, 19 (17) : 3395 - 3411
  • [8] Modernization in agricultural water distribution system for aquifer storage and recovery-A case study
    Jolfan, Mohsen Hosseini
    Shahdany, S. Mehdy Hashemy
    Javadi, Saman
    Milan, Sami Ghordoyee
    Neshat, Aminreza
    Berndtsson, Ronny
    Tork, Hamed
    AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT, 2023, 282
  • [9] Assessing the Impact of Recycled Water Quality and Clogging on Infiltration Rates at A Pioneering Soil Aquifer Treatment (SAT) Site in Alice Springs, Northern Territory (NT), Australia
    Barry, Karen E.
    Vanderzalm, Joanne L.
    Miotlinski, Konrad
    Dillon, Peter J.
    WATER, 2017, 9 (03):
  • [10] Evaluation of Clogging during Sand-Filtered Surface Water Injection for Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR): Pilot Experiment in the Llobregat Delta (Barcelona, Spain)
    Camprovin, Pere
    Hernandez, Marta
    Fernandez, Sonia
    Martin-Alonso, Jordi
    Galofre, Belen
    Mesa, Jose
    WATER, 2017, 9 (04)