Indirect Potable Reuse at Cottonwood Water and Sanitation District - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Indirect Potable Reuse at Cottonwood Water and Sanitation District

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Aquifer. Cottonwood Water & Sanitation District. September 2002. Arber. Direct Potable Reuse ... Capital cost 10% less for centralized treatment. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Indirect Potable Reuse at Cottonwood Water and Sanitation District


1
Indirect Potable Reuse at Cottonwood Water and
Sanitation District
  • Rick Arber, Ben Johnson
  • Richard P. Arber Associates
  • Pat Mulhern
  • MRE

2
Types of Reuse
3
Agricultural Industrial
  • Exchanges
  • Recycle-process, cooling

4
Municipal
  • Urban Landscape Irrigation
  • Indirect Potable Use
  • Direct Potable Reuse

5
Non-Potable Reuse
6
Unplanned Indirect Potable Reuse
7
Planned Indirect Potable Reuse
8
Direct Potable Reuse
AWT
9
  • Cottonwood Water and Sanitation District

10
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11
  • CWSD.
  • Formed in 1981
  • 1200 Acres of residential and commercial
    development
  • Slow development in 1980s
  • Rapid development in 1990s

12
  • Water Supplies
  • Deep wells (Dawson, Denver, Arapahoe, Laramie Fox
    Hills)
  • Cherry Creek alluvium
  • Wastewater
  • ACWWA Lone Tree Creek WWTP

13
  • Deep Wells
  • 995 acre Feet
  • Fe, Mn, H2S
  • Alluvial Water
  • 141 acre feet senior rights
  • 585 acre feet junior rights
  • Upstream discharges (Pinery, Parker, Stonegate)

14
  • Deep Wells
  • non-renewing
  • draw down/capacities
  • require treatment
  • Alluvial Wells
  • renewable
  • high capacity
  • require treatment

15
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16
Alternatives
  • Deep Wells
  • Non-renewing eventual depletion
  • Additional wells need with draw down
  • Limited production
  • Treatment required

17
Alternatives
  • Dual Distribution
  • Import Groundwater

18
Alternatives
  • Reuse
  • Renewable supply
  • Extend deep groundwater
  • Greater production

19
Centralized vs. Decentralized Treatment
  • Capital cost 10 less for centralized treatment.
  • OM cost similar for centralized treatment and
    decentralized.
  • Centralized treatment easier to operate.

20
The Plan
21
  • Average daily demand 2 mgd
  • Maximum daily demand 6 mgd

22
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23
Treatment
  • Cartridge Filters
  • UV?
  • Anti-scalant
  • Nanofiltration
  • Degassifier
  • pH adjust
  • Alkalinity
  • Chlorine

24
Indirect Potable Reuse
  • Multiple Barriers
  • WWTP/AWT
  • Alluvium (3000 ft., 1.5 years travel)
  • Membrane water treatment (100)
  • Final disinfection

25
Concentrate Disposal
  • Cherry Creek Basin
  • PO4
  • Split Flow
  • ACWWA WWTP (base flow)
  • Irrigation

26
Pilot Testing
27
Objectives
  • Evaluate effectiveness of NF on raw water
  • Determine design criteria
  • Evaluate fouling potential
  • Evaluate feed, permeate, and concentrate water
    quality
  • Select appropriate membrane

28
Pilot Testing Plan
  • Three month duration
  • Test different membranes
  • Sample water quality 6 times
  • At beginning and end of each membrane test
  • Operate at 83 recovery
  • 2.0 gpm permeate
  • 0.5 gpm concentrate

29
Performance
  • Tested two membranes
  • Osmonics
  • Filmtec (2 month test)
  • Added anti-scalant chemical(Pro Treat)
  • Potential for sulfate precipitation reduced
  • No significant fouling was observed

30
Results
  • Both membranes performed well
  • Osmonics tighter - higher driving pressure
  • Filmtec looser - lower contaminant rejection
  • Average Rejection
  • TDS
  • Osmonics 68 Filmtec 62
  • Hardness
  • Osmonics 84 Filmtec 69
  • TOC successfully rejected by both membranes (BDL)

31
Project Costs
  • Treatment
  • 9.3 million
  • Ancillary facilities
  • 2.3 million

32
Public Education Program
  • Consultant
  • Literature
  • CDPHE involvement
  • Public meetings

33
Schedule
  • Predesign underway
  • Design 2003
  • Construct 2004
  • Start up 2005

34
Conclusions
  • NF effective in removing TOC
  • Multiple barriers provide public health
    protection
  • Indirect potable reuse is viable, cost effective
    water supply for CWSD
  • Public support is needed

35
  • Questions?

36
Concentrate Disposal
  • 15 of feed flow (1.8 mgd)
  • PO4 1.2 mg/L
  • Annual average flow 1/3 max day (0.6 mgd)
  • Base flow (in-house) 57 of annual demand (0.34
    mgd)
  • Irrigation 43 of annual demand (0.26 mgd)

37
Concentrate Disposal
  • Base flow to Lone Tree WWTP
  • Effluent PO4lt 0.05 mg/L
  • PO4 removed from basin 1190 lb./year
  • Balance to irrigation ( 115 acres)
  • Irrigation PO4 1.2 mg/L
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