Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: Plain chlorination
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:Chlorination terms are used to specify where and how chlorine is applied in the treatment train. Precise terminology helps operators and designers communicate process intent and monitor residuals.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:Plain chlorination: chlorine is applied directly to raw water (often for small systems where raw water is already low in turbidity and contamination).Pre-chlorination: chlorine dosing prior to coagulation/sedimentation to control algae/odors.De-chlorination: removal of residual chlorine (e.g., with sulfur compounds).
Step-by-Step Solution:
Match scenario (chlorine only) to standard term “plain chlorination”.Confirm other terms do not fit the described process step.Verification / Alternative check:Review utility SOPs; small ground-water systems often employ plain chlorination when raw water meets other standards.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:Pre-chlorination implies upstream of other steps; first-chlorination is non-standard wording; de-chlorination removes chlorine rather than applying it; breakpoint describes dose–residual behavior, not the process location.
Common Pitfalls:Using plain chlorination on highly turbid water; inadequate contact time leading to poor disinfection.
Final Answer:Plain chlorination
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