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DSpace at VNU: Response to comment on "Arsenic removal from groundwater by household sand filters: Comparative field study, model calculations, and health benefits"

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Response to Comment on “Arsenic Removalfrom Groundwater by Household Sand Filters: Comparative Field Study, Model Calculations, and Health Benefits” We appreciate the comments made by Bl

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Response to Comment on “Arsenic Removal

from Groundwater by Household Sand Filters:

Comparative Field Study, Model Calculations,

and Health Benefits”

We appreciate the comments made by Blaney and co-authors

(1) highlighting their important contribution in providing

thousands of people in West Bengal with drinking water that

is treated for arsenic removal in community-based activated

alumina units Operation and performance of these units

are documented in a publication published by Sarkar et al

(2).

The primary comment of subject (1) refers to a remark

made in the introduction of our recent article (3) We therein

state: “There is an urgent need for simple and efficient As

removal techniques on the household level Ion exchange,

activated alumina, reverse osmosis, membrane filtration,

modified coagulation/filtration, and enhanced lime softening

are water treatment technologies for As removal

recom-mended by the USEPA However, none of these technologies

are currently applied on a broad scale in developing countries

because they require sophisticated technical systems and

are therefore unpractical in low income regions.”

Cor-respondingly, our work focused on the performance and

applicability of point-of-use sand filters for arsenic removal

that are constructed, operated, and maintained by each

individual family on their private home premises This is a

considerably different situation which cannot be compared

to the community based approach referred to in the comment

(1).

We evaluated sand filters in Vietnam where millions of

people are using arsenic-burdened groundwater for daily

drinking water needs (4, 5) People in this area prefer to have

a drinking water supply in their own houses We showed

that household sand filters, which use locally available sand

and operate without chemicals, can achieve average arsenic

removal rates of 80% in groundwater Additionally, analyses

of hair samples verified that people consuming this

sand-filtered water lowered their arsenic body burden to

physi-ologically safe levels The concentration of dissolved iron in

groundwater is the decisive factor for the removal of arsenic

The easily observable removal of iron from the pumped water

makes the effect of a sand filter immediately recognizable

even to people who are not aware of the arsenic problem

Regarding the use of activated alumina (AA), Blaney et al

in their comment do not mention that (i) the AA units are

periodically regenerated with 175 L of 4% NaOH and 150 L

of 1% HCl (2), (ii) AA must eventually be replaced after a

certain lifetime, and, (iii) monitoring of arsenic levels in the

unit outlet is applied (2) Hence, unlike the sand filters

described in our publication (3), AA requires chemicals and

presumably demands well-trained people to properly

con-duct such maintenance Besides, 10% of iron seems to pass

the AA unit while the household sand filters remove g99%

The second issue addressed by Blaney et al probably arises

from misreading of the section entitled “Model Calculations”

in our paper We have exclusively modeled passive copre-cipitation (but not sand filters) of arsenic to freshly precipi-tated HFO using sorption constants derived from laboratory

experiments (6), but we did by no means state that “birnessite

might be responsible for greater arsenic removal with sand filters than with coprecipitation.” In fact, the particular paragraphs compare coprecipitation efficiencies determined

in real groundwater in the field with coprecipitation experi-ments performed in the laboratory in artificial groundwater Concerning the third point, we generally agree that community-based arsenic removal providing drinking water for some 100 families has the advantage of concentrating arsenic-burdened sludge in one confined place, where its disposal can better be secured than in individual households

Literature Cited

(1) Blaney, L.; Sarkar, S.; SenGupta, A K Comment on “Arsenic Removal from Groundwater by Household Sand Filters: Comparative Field Study, Model Calculations, and Health

Benefits” Environ Sci Technol 2007, 41, 1051-1052.

(2) Sarkar, S.; Gupta, A.; Biswas, R K.; Deb, A K.; Greenleaf, J E.; SenGupta, A K Well-head arsenic removal units in remote villages of Indian subcontinent: Field results and performance

evaluation Water Res 2005, 39 (10), 2196-2006.

(3) Berg, M.; Luzi, S.; Trang, P T K.; Viet, P H.; Giger, W.; Stu¨ ben,

D Arsenic Removal from Groundwater by Household Sand Filters: Comparative Field Study, Model Calculations, and

Health Benefits Environ Sci Technol 2006, 40, 5567-5573.

(4) Berg, M.; Tran, H C.; Nguyen, T C.; Pham, H V.; Schertenleib, R.; Giger, W Arsenic Contamination of Groundwater and

Drinking Water in Vietnam: A Human Health Threat Environ.

Sci Technol 2001, 35, 2621-2626.

(5) Trang, P T K.; Berg, M.; Viet, P V.; Mui, N V.; van der Meer,

J R Bacterial Bioassay for Rapid and Accurate Analysis of

Arsenic in Highly Variable Groundwater Samples Environ Sci.

Technol 2005, 39, 7625-7630.

(6) Roberts, L C.; Hug, S J.; Ruettimann, T.; Billah, M.; Khan, A W.; Rahman, M T Arsenic removal with iron(II) and iron(III) waters with high silicate and phosphate concentrations

Environ Sci Technol 2004, 38, 307-315.

Michael Berg,* Samuel Luzi, and Walter Giger

Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

Ueberlandstrasse 133, 8600 Du¨ bendorf, Switzerland

Pham Thi Kim Trang and Pham Hung Viet

Center for Environmental Technology and Sustainable Development (CETASD)

Hanoi University of Science

334 Nguyen Trai, Hanoi, Vietnam

Doris Stu 1 ben

Institute for Mineralogy and Geochemistry University of Karlsruhe

Kaiserstrasse 12, D-76128 Karlsruhe, Germany ES062798D

Environ Sci Technol.2007,41,1053

10.1021/es062798d CCC: $37.00  2007 American Chemical Society VOL 41, NO 3, 2007 / ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY 91053

Published on Web 12/30/2006

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