NRWA picks water provided by ITT Aquious membranes as best-tasting in USA

Nov. 19, 2005
The Fyne Process water filtration system, developed by Aquious-PCI Membrane Systems and installed in a remote Alaskan village, produces the nation's best tasting drinking water, according to the NRWA. Just getting the system to site was a challenge. That, and the technology that delivers such good water, makes for interesting reading...

MILFORD, OH, Nov. 16, 2005 -- Teachers and students in Kipnuk, Alaska, enjoy the best tasting water in the nation, according to the National Rural Water Association (NRWA). What's their secret? The school, which gets its water from rainwater and surface sources, uses a FYNE membrane filtration system from Aquious-PCI Membranes Systems Inc., of Milford, Ohio, to treat its drinking water.

The Fyne Process has become a top choice of water treatment technology for rural communities that get their water from organic-laden surface sources like lakes or rivers. Nanofiltration membranes reject undesired dissolved organic materials (mostly humic and fulvic acids) that, after chlorination, yield undesired disinfection by-products like TTHM (trihalomethanes) and HAA(5) (haloacetic acid). The membrane system also reduces undesirable levels of iron and other metals, which may be found in these types of surface water. In addition, the membranes hold back waterborne pathogens, microbes and viruses.

Surface water near Kipnuk averages 8 mg/L organic content. However, since it's used to supplement rain catchment, the actual amount of organic matter in the water at varies widely over time. The Fyne Process, which uses proprietary half-inch tubular membranes that resist blinding, is ideal for this type of filtration. The tubular membranes require minimal pre-filtration and can be kept clean by periodically passing a foam ball down the length of the tubes. This makes them much less costly to operate and maintain than spiral membranes, which require up-stream pre-filters to remove suspended solids down to 10 microns, and frequent chemical cleaning.

The units used by the Kipnuk school (and two others in Kongiganak and Kwigillingok) are small even by FYNE standards, processing just 1.1 gpm. After being processed, the water at the schools meets or exceeds standards for drinking water for TTHM (< 80 µg /L) and HAA(5) (<60 µg/L). Turbidity levels are typically below 0.1 NTU. Standards require <0.3 NTU. The systems are simple and automated enough to allow unattended operation, with intervention on no more than a weekly basis for routine operation and maintenance. The systems can be monitored continuously and remotely through an internet connection.

Best-Tasting Waer in the USA
The NRWA selected Lower Kushkokwim School District (LKSD), in Bethel, Alaska, which operates the school in Kipnuk, as the winner of the 6th Annual Great American Water Taste Test held recently in Washington. D.C. LKSD competed against the top water systems from 48 state rural water associations to take this honor.

Several of the schools in the LKSD have independent drinking water systems and, before the Fyne systems were installed, used rain catchment as the primary source of drinking water. The captured rainwater was coarse filtered and processed by small distillation units. Inadequate supply, and the fact that the water did not meet the standards established under the EPA's stringent Stage 1 D/DBP rule, meant that a new system was needed. Greg Jones, president of GV Jones and Associates and engineer to LKSD for their water treatment projects, recommended the Fyne Process from Aquious -- PCI Membrane Systems for the school's filtration needs.

As noted, Kongiganak and Kwigillingok, also currently use Fyne systems to produce potable water for students and teachers, and two other schools in the district are using Aquious -- PCI Membrane systems for groundwater filtration.

Crossing the Alaskan tundra
Just getting the Fyne units to their destinations was a challenge. Located in remote western Alaska, about 100 miles southwest of the city of Bethel, Kipnuk is one of 27 schools in 23 traditional Yup'ik Eskimo communities that make up the LKSD. Based in Bethel, the LKSD serves an area roughly equivalent to the size of West Virginia. The district has 3800 students, mostly of Yup'ik descent, and 352 teachers. Many teachers live in homes located on the school grounds. Due to the numerous ponds and marsh-like areas in this part of Alaska there are few roads outside of Bethel, and most travel in the Lower Kuskokwim District is done by plane. Land travel is only possible during the winter when the tundra and its lakes are frozen.

The Fyne units were packaged in 20-foot steel shipping/cargo containers that were completely fitted out so they could house the units permanently once they arrived onsite. They shipped from Bellingham, WA, aboard ocean-going barges and were transported to Bethel. At Bethel, they were trans-shipped onto smaller barges and towed back down the Kushkokwim River to be landed on the beaches near Kipnuk and the other communities.

"The orders were placed in July," explains David Pearson, General Manager of Aquious-PCI Membrane Systems "with the understanding that they must make it to Alaska before mid-September so they could be landed on the beach before the ocean froze. Once they arrived, they had to wait until the winter freeze before being moved from the beach and hauled across the tundra to their final locations."

Aquious-PCI Membrane Systems Inc. (www.pcimem.com), a unit of ITT Industries, is a world leader in the application of membrane filtration systems. In addition to the Fyne Process water-treatment system, the company specializes in filtration systems based on tubular membranes for liquids containing suspended, colloidal or viscous materials. Aquious also supplies spiral-wound or hollow fiber membranes for clean solutions, and ceramic membranes for high chemical compatibility and thermal resistance. With its own membrane manufacturing facility and in-house research and development group, Aquious is able to engineer filtration materials and systems that exactly match the customer's application requirements. Installation, commissioning, training and technical support services are also available.

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In other recent ITT Industries news:
-- "Dual Pass RO System from Aquious Reduces Cost and Monitoring for Navy Lab"
-- "Two MGD Desalination Plant from ITT Aquious WET"

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