Water treatment steps
Public drinking water
systems use different water treatment methods to provide safe drinking water
for their communities. Public water systems often use a series of water
treatment steps that include coagulation, flocculation, sedimentation,
filtration, and disinfection.
Water treatment steps
Coagulation
Coagulation is often the
first step in water treatment. During coagulation, chemicals with a positive
charge are added to the water. The positive charge neutralizes the negative
charge of dirt and other dissolved particles in the water. When this occurs,
the particles bind with the chemicals to form slightly larger particles. Common
chemicals used in this step include specific types of salts, aluminum, or iron.
Flocculation
Flocculation follows the
coagulation step. Flocculation is the gentle mixing of the water to form
larger, heavier particles called flocs. Often, water treatment plants will add
additional chemicals during this step to help the flocs form.
Sedimentation
Sedimentation is one of
the steps water treatment plants use to separate out solids from the water.
During sedimentation, flocs settle to the bottom of the water because they are
heavier than water.
Filtration
Once the flocs have
settled to the bottom of the water, the clear water on top is filtered to
separate additional solids from the water. During filtration, the clear water
passes through filters that have different pore sizes and are made of different
materials (such as sand, gravel, and charcoal). These filters remove dissolved
particles and germs, such as dust, chemicals, parasites, bacteria, and viruses.
Activated carbon filters also remove any bad odors.
Water treatment plants
can use a process called ultrafiltration in addition to or instead of
traditional filtration. During ultrafiltration, the water goes through a filter
membrane with very small pores. This filter only lets through water and other
small molecules (such as salts and tiny, charged molecules).
Reverse
osmosisexternal icon is another filtration method that removes
additional particles from water. Water treatment plants often use reverse
osmosis when treating recycled waterexternal
icon (also called reused water) or salt water for drinking.
Disinfection
After the water has been
filtered, water treatment plants may add one or more chemical disinfectants
(such as chlorine,
chloramine, or chlorine dioxide) to kill any remaining parasites,
bacteria, or viruses. To help keep water safe as it travels to homes and
businesses, water treatment plants will make sure the water has low levels of
the chemical disinfectant when it leaves the treatment plant. This remaining
disinfectant kills germs living
in the pipes between the water treatment plant and your tap.
In addition to or
instead of adding chlorine, chloramine, or chlorine dioxide, water treatment
plants can also disinfect water using ultraviolet
(UV) light pdf icon and
ozone work well to disinfect water in the treatment plant, but these
disinfection methods do not continue killing germs as water travels through the
pipes between the treatment plant and your tap.
Water treatment plants
also commonly adjust water pH and add fluoride after the disinfection step.
Adjusting the pH improves taste, reduces corrosion (breakdown) of pipes, and
ensures chemical disinfectants continue killing germs as the water travels
through pipes. Drinking water with the right amount of fluoride keeps teeth
strong and reduces cavities.
Surface
water collects
on the ground or in a stream, river, lake, reservoir, or ocean.
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