Tucson’s AOP Water Treatment Facility Wins Design Award
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Technology
Tucson Water’s Advanced Oxidation Process (AOP) Water Treatment Facility was awarded the 2015 Grand Prize in Design from the American Academy of Environmental Engineers and Scientists (AAEES).
As part of a commitment to provide safe, reliable drinking water, the city of Tucson, Arizona completed the installation of a new Advanced Oxidation Process Water Treatment Facility in January, 2014. The system uses 6 TrojanUVPhox units and supplies purified water to nearly 50,000 people.
The technology is treating groundwater contaminated with 1,4-dioxane and other volatile organic compounds (VOCs ), which were used in aircraft manufacturing companies in the Tucson airport area from the 1940s to 1970s.
1,4-dioxane is a contaminant not easily removed with conventional technologies, but TrojanUV’s oxidation systems destroy VOCs, breaking them down into their harmless components almost instantly. The process combines ultraviolet light with hydrogen peroxide to purify up to 8 million gallons of water a day.
Source: TrojanUV
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- Oxidation
- Drinking Water Treatment
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