Small community relies on UV for safe drinking water and wastewater treatment

For the Fetherston Park mobile home community in Eastern Ontario, UV Pure disinfection systems provided the best combination of protection, performance, and low maintenance at a price that the small community can afford.

Two Hallett 30 systems were installed in 2006 to upgrade the community’s drinking water system to meet provincial standards. The engineer selected UV Pure systems for primary disinfection because the systems are effective even for mineral-rich well water—unlike conventional “light-in-a-pipe” UV systems that can foul quickly and require frequent shutdowns for cleaning.

When the Park’s wastewater system was re-built in 2015, Clearford decided to incorporate dual Hallett 30 units for chemical-free disinfection of the treated effluent to make the water safe for discharging to a nearby ditch. A new membrane bioreactor (MBR) treatment plant was constructed with advanced technologies for treating the effluent to very high standards. All of the mechanical equipment is housed in a single 40-foot shipping container that is capable of treating 16,000 US gallons per day (60 cubic metres per day). Clearford’s MBR plant is designed with fit, functionality and reliability in mind—and UV Pure systems complement that approach.

“We’re confident that the UV Pure Hallett systems will provide continuous, uninterrupted disinfection with very little maintenance requirements. This lets us provide the best possible service to the residents of Fetherston and consistently meet regulatory requirements while maintaining low lifecycle costs.”

~ Kevin Hall, Project Engineer for Clearford

The site operators appreciate that UV Pure systems have easy lamp changes, remote monitoring, and an automatic cleaning system that prevents the accumulation of scale and biofouling inside the quartz sleeve, eliminating the need for time-consuming manual cleaning. Furthermore, operators avoid the risks of shipping, storing and handling toxic chlorine for disinfection.

Image: ‘Fetherston park saga comes to an end’ article, InsideOttawaValley.com

 

Contact us to discuss your UV disinfection needs.

Singapore housing development installs 78 UV systems for rainwater harvesting

An innovative rainwater harvesting system equipped with UV Pure disinfection allows residents at a new luxury housing development in Singapore to dramatically reduce potable water demand and contribute to the island nation’s goal of water self-sufficiency.

The systems were designed and installed by local UV Pure representative Netatech to capture, store and treat rainwater to a high standard that is safe for on-site landscape irrigation. Each of the 78 housing units is equipped with its own fully automated, chemical-free rainwater harvesting and disinfection system that can be managed by the homeowners. The systems will collectively help reduce potable water demand in the complex by an estimated 233,600 cubic metres (61.7 million US gallons) of water per year, alongside other water savings initiatives.

 

Rainwater is abundant in Singapore and our clients demand an efficient, easy-to-use harvesting and treatment system that can take full advantage of this resource. When designing this system, we compared alternatives such as chlorine and ultrafiltration membranes, but ultimately selected the UV Pure Upstream® system for its chemical-free operation, low maintenance requirements and energy efficiency.

~ Daniel Wong, Technology Innovation Officer for Netatech

Each treatment system includes a skid-mounted UV Pure unit in a dedicated outdoor compartment outside the house. Rainwater from each property is collected by gravity in a 700-litre (180-gallon) tank that passes through a pre-treatment screen filter and 5-micron cartridge filter. Disinfection is performed by an Upstream NC 10-75 unit that provides up to 33 litres per minute (9 gallons per minute) of clean water to supplement household water use.

 

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Home treatment systems deliver safe water to First Nation community

A pilot program is demonstrating the benefits of point-of-entry (POE) treatment and UV disinfection to bring affordable, safe drinking water to the First Nation community of Alderville, Ontario.

The project, led by the Canadian unit of Arcadis, an international engineering design consultancy firm based in the Netherlands, provides a complete multi-barrier POE water treatment system for each of the 33 homes in the community to improve water quality and protect residents from waterborne pathogens.

Shed for water treatment systemThe treatment systems are designed to produce potable water that meets Ontario drinking water standards. Each residential POE system is installed outside of the home in an insulated, heated enclosure that combines water softening and filtration with an easy-to-operate Hallett UV disinfection system. A private well provides source water at each home, but water quality varies with groundwater levels, soil conditions, and mineral hardness.

The POE approach eliminates the need to build a central treatment plant and a network of distribution pipes to serve the entire community. The installation of distribution pipes would have added significant economic and engineering challenges to this project since many of the homes are separated by several kilometres.

“We selected UV Pure Hallett systems for this project because they are simple to use, require very little maintenance and are certified to the NSF/ANSI 55 Class A standard. The automatic cleaning system has prevented buildup of minerals on the quartz sleeves, which means we haven’t had to perform any manual cleanings in over a year of operation.”

~ Yousry Hamdy, Manager of Water and Wastewater for Arcadis Canada

Annual lamp changes are the only maintenance that the operator has performed on the systems since commissioning in October 2015. The Hallett systems are also equipped with 4-20 mA monitoring and smart sensors that provide continuous logging of UV intensity, net UV transmittance, and dose. Alarms notify the local operator and shut down the system to prevent residents from using the water.

 

Contact us to discuss your UV disinfection needs.