Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-1710, USA.
Water Res. 2013 Sep 15;47(14):5176-88. doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2013.05.058. Epub 2013 Jun 11.
Supplying piped water intermittently is a common practice throughout the world that increases the risk of microbial contamination through multiple mechanisms. Converting an intermittent supply to a continuous supply has the potential to improve the quality of water delivered to consumers. To understand the effects of this upgrade on water quality, we tested samples from reservoirs, consumer taps, and drinking water provided by households (e.g. from storage containers) from an intermittent and continuous supply in Hubli-Dharwad, India, over one year. Water samples were tested for total coliform, Escherichia coli, turbidity, free chlorine, and combined chlorine. While water quality was similar at service reservoirs supplying the continuous and intermittent sections of the network, indicator bacteria were detected more frequently and at higher concentrations in samples from taps supplied intermittently compared to those supplied continuously (p < 0.01). Detection of E. coli was rare in continuous supply, with 0.7% of tap samples positive compared to 31.7% of intermittent water supply tap samples positive for E. coli. In samples from both continuously and intermittently supplied taps, higher concentrations of total coliform were measured after rainfall events. While source water quality declined slightly during the rainy season, only tap water from intermittent supply had significantly more indicator bacteria throughout the rainy season compared to the dry season. Drinking water samples provided by households in both continuous and intermittent supplies had higher concentrations of indicator bacteria than samples collected directly from taps. Most households with continuous supply continued to store water for drinking, resulting in re-contamination, which may reduce the benefits to water quality of converting to continuous supply.
间歇性供水在全球范围内是一种常见做法,通过多种机制增加了微生物污染的风险。将间歇性供水转换为连续供水有可能提高向消费者提供的水质。为了了解这种升级对水质的影响,我们在印度 Hubli-Dharwad 对间歇性和连续供水的水库、消费者水龙头和家庭提供的饮用水(例如来自储水容器)进行了为期一年的采样测试。水样测试了总大肠菌群、大肠杆菌、浊度、游离氯和结合氯。虽然连续和间歇性网络部分的供水水库水质相似,但与连续供水相比,间歇性供水的水龙头水样中更频繁且浓度更高地检测到指示菌(p < 0.01)。在连续供水的水样中很少检测到大肠杆菌,连续供水的水龙头样本中只有 0.7%呈阳性,而间歇性供水的水龙头样本中则有 31.7%呈阳性。在连续和间歇性供水的水龙头水样中,在降雨事件后测量到总大肠菌群浓度更高。尽管水源水质在雨季略有下降,但只有间歇性供水的自来水在整个雨季的指示菌数量明显高于旱季。来自连续和间歇性供水的家庭提供的饮用水样本中的指示菌浓度高于直接从水龙头收集的样本。大多数连续供水的家庭仍继续储存饮用水,导致再次污染,这可能会降低转换为连续供水对水质的好处。