Product category:
Potable water, test and treatment
News Release from: Hanovia | Subject: Trends in UV
Edited by the Processingtalk Editorial
Team on 09 May 2007
Emerging trends in UV water disinfection
The UV disinfection industry has experienced tremendous growth over the last 20 years: Hanovia here presents a review of the current technologies and application experience, and emerging trends
The UV disinfection industry has experienced tremendous growth over the last 20 years The development of new UV technologies over this period has been a perfect example of an industry investing to meet market demand - in this case demand for an effective, low cost, and environmentally friendly disinfection technology
This article was originally published on Processingtalk on 24 Feb 2003 at 8.00am (UK)
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The acceptance of UV disinfection at water plants treating in excess of three billion litres daily worldwide is proof that UV is no longer an 'emerging' technology, but rather an accepted technology to be used routinely by engineers to safeguard human health.
The UV industry continues to change, grow and invent new products and applications.
This article briefly explores some of the emerging trends.
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Virtually all of the leading UV companies have now been acquired by multi-product, financially mature industrial groups such as Danaher, Halma, Siemens, ITT and Suez.
This has induced market stability and, whilst this will ensure highly professional product offerings, it also means that many of these newly acquired companies must either become or remain profitable to justify the investment made in them.
The regulatory acceptance of UV for treating drinking water and regulatory standards for validating new UV reactor designs all signal a major shift in the acceptance of the technology into the mainstream.
The UV industry has experienced double digit sales growth over the last 20 years, and combined annual sales of UV products worldwide will soon be in excess of GBP270M (euro400M).
New Technology.
The use of computational fluid dynamics modelling has vastly improved the manufacturers abilities to predict with confidence the level of treatment required using their proprietary equipment.
System sizing is no longer a black art, as the selected manufacturer can work with the design engineer to accurately predict treatment levels under varying conditions of water quality and flow.
All UV equipment manufacturers will soon use this tool to optimise the dose delivery of their reactors and minimise energy costs.
As manufacturers develop and improve optimised reactors, they will then validate the designs using European or USEPA validation protocols.
These optimised reactors will be rolled out over the next several years.
Conventional UV lamp technology will also improve.
Medium pressure lamps will continue to see gains in energy efficiency, lamp life and power density, with Quartz coating techniques extending lamp life to well over 12,000 hours.
This approach will remain favoured for compact, small footprint installations, particularly retrofit, or where automated wiping is required.
Low pressure, high output lamps will also have increasing power, perhaps approaching 1kW, which will decrease the footprint and maintenance requirements for systems using this technology.
Lamp disposal will emerge as a significant issue for low pressure UV installations which use many thousands of low pressure lamps.
New UV light sources such as light emitting diodes (LEDs) claim to be a technology of the future.
The advantages of LEDs are their ability to concentrate virtually all of the electrical power into a very narrow bandwidth of 260 nm to 262 nm, their vastly superior power efficiencies, a very long lamp life (reported to be greater than 100,000 hours) and, because of their point-source nature, they are not restricted to conventional cylindrical designs.
Likely drawbacks of this promising technology will be in the power supply drives for the lamps, which remain largely in the concept phase.
Another interesting technology involves the use of microwaves to energize a UV lamp without the use of electrodes.
Developers claim to have produced power outputs of up to 1000W with similar UV outputs to low pressure lamps, which would dramatically improve the footprint and maintenance of low pressure lamp-based systems.
The absence of electrodes also greatly increases the lamp life.
This development could well see microwave power supply emerge as the consumable, with the lamp remaining in situ for 4-5 years.
The long term effects of using microwaves on sleeve wipers remains unknown.
UV sensor technology has also greatly improved over the last decade, with stable, reliable and germicidally accurate sensors now available and a well regulated calibration protocol now in place.
In addition, manufacturers have improved the proprietary control systems for taking information from the sensors, flowmeters and other monitoring devices and using this information to optimise the performance of their equipment.
They can also interface with the operator at a plant control centre.
The D10 values* of more and more micro-organisms is now known, with the list growing all the time.
Most notably, research has confirmed the very low doses required to disinfect Cryptosporidium and Giardia, while also finding several viruses that have an unusually high D10.
As new applications for UV are found, new microbes will be added to existing D10 tables.
A major concern to the UV industry is the issue of reactivation - the apparent ability of some micro-organisms to repair the damage done to their DNA by UV, reactivating their ability to infect.
DNA repair can occur in a closed (dark) system, but is more likely in open systems under direct sunlight (photo-reactivation).
The dose level and lamp type seem to affect the degree of reactivation, with low pressure (single wavelength) UV lamps appearing to be more susceptible to photo-reactivation than medium pressure (multi-wavelength) lamps.
A much larger research effort into the area of photo-reactivation is required and will most likely be forthcoming over the next 5 years.
A significant amount of research has also targeted the question of UV disinfection by-products, specifically the most common water constituents such as chlorine, bromide, nitrate, ozone, NOM**, and iron.
At normal UV disinfection doses no significant disinfection by-products have been shown to form.
Research continues with more exotic water constituents.
NEW MARKETS - DRINKING WATER.
By far the greatest potential market for UV disinfection is drinking water.
UV is now accepted as an Available Technology to deactivate Cryptosporidium and Giardia in surface water and other vulnerable sources.
From 1997 to the present, growth in this market has been generally slow due to several factors, including the uncertainty of sensitivity of Cryptosporidium and Giardia to UV; the lack of a regulatory framework for UV disinfection; the lack of a guidance manual; the lack of case histories and engineering knowledge in the application of UV in drinking water plants; the general conservatism of the water industry; and, finally, the uncertainty of the outcome of several court cases considering a royalty on the use of UV for Cryptosporidium and Giardia destruction.
All of these issues have now either been resolved or resolutions are imminent, paving the way for rapid growth in this market.
Another UV application with much potential is wastewater re-use for irrigation and grey water applications.
Re-use is already common in the south-western US and other areas of acute fresh water shortages such as southern Europe, the Middle East and North Africa - even parts of the UK.
UV systems for this market are validated to much higher doses than drinking water systems.
Drinking water type product validation - with the accompanying rigour - will probably emerge as the dominant method of assessing suitability for these critical applications.
The ability to prevent photo repair will also emerge as key.
Finally, UV for advanced oxidation involves the use of UV, either by itself or in combination with a hydroxyl radical, to break down contaminants in water.
This technology has already been successfully used for groundwater remediation, industrial wastewater treatment and drinking water treatment.
Most notably, several large advanced oxidation projects in the US have involved the use of advanced oxidation for NDMA***, MTBE****, pesticides, taste and odour compounds, and chlorinated solvents.
SUMMARY.
The UV industry has matured considerably over the last decade and is now highly regulated and dominated by major water companies.
Conventional UV technologies have been field tested and now have considerable track records in a wide range of applications.
Uncertainties surrounding regulations, royalties, technology and engineering have decreased and acceptance of UV is expected to grow rapidly over the next 20 years.
Conventional UV designs have been greatly aided by CFD, which will be used as a routine sizing tool for future designs.
Incremental improvements in conventional lamps, sensors and controls will also continue over the next decade.
New technologies such as LED lamps and microwave lamps hold promise of further improvements in electrical efficiency, footprint and cost.
The stage is now set for dramatic growth in the drinking water market, especially if new technologies can bring increased efficiencies and lower costs.
Other applications, such as wastewater reuse are smaller, and will grow at slower rates, but are still attractive applications for UV.
The use of UV for advanced oxidation is still in its infancy and is highly dependent on energy costs.
These markets will grow dramatically if newer, more energy efficient technologies are available.
NOTES.
* The D10 value for a micro-organism is the UV dose necessary to cause a 99% reduction in colony forming units.
The relationship between UV dose and kill rate is logarithmic.
For example, if a 99.99% kill rate of a particular micro-organism is desired, the necessary dose is determined by multiplying the D10 value by four.
** Natural organic matter.
*** N-nitrosodymethylamine.
**** Methyl tertiary-butyl ether.
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