The objective of this project was to evaluate the performance of a pressure filter utilizing crushed glass as the filter media in a dual media anthraciteglass filter compared to a dual media anthracitesand filter. In general, the particle removal capabilities of the crushed-glass filter were slightly poorer than those of a sand filter, as quantified in a field application in the community of Orangedale, Nova Scotia. It was found that the crushed glass used in this project had a higher angularity and slightly higher uniformity coefficient then the sand tested. After 6 months of use the crushed-glass filter was able to produce a filter effluent of 5070 particles/mL (diameter >2 μμm), which is greater than the 2550 particles/mL (diameter >2 μμm) that was produced by sand filter. Over the course of the 6-month study the dual media crushed-glass filter was able to achieve a 1.4-log removal, which was only slightly greater than the dual media silica sand filter that achieved a 1.6-log removal of particles with diameters >2 μμm. Key words: filtration, drinking water, recycled glass, sustainability, particle counting.
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1 September 2002
Research Article|
September 01 2002
Comparing crushed recycled glass to silica sand for dual media filtration Available to Purchase
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1496-256X
Print ISSN: 1496-2551
Journal of Environmental Engineering and Science (2002) 1 (5): 349–358.
Citation
Rutledge SO, Gagnon GA (2002), "Comparing crushed recycled glass to silica sand for dual media filtration". Journal of Environmental Engineering and Science, Vol. 1 No. 5 pp. 349–358, doi: https://doi.org/10.1139/s02-023
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