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Experiment 5: Alum dose = 105 mg/L

This is an a significant overdose. The graph below shows the effluent turbidity plotted against time for capture velocities of 0.058, 0.116, 0.174, and 0.231 mm/sec, for the low floc blanket level only.

Figure 1: Effluent Turbidity vs. Time for Floc Blanket on low, alum dose = 105 mg/L

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This extremely high dose was tested to show what a failure looks like (the a turbidity is greater than 1 NTU).  While the effluent turbidity averages less than 1 NTU, there are many it is inconsistent and frequently spikes above this acceptable value 1 NTU for all capture velocities, meaning this is a good demonstration of failure.

This overdose failed because the floc blanket was not effective because The failure of the overdose can be attributed to a less effective floc blanket. This occurs since the flocs that form with an overdose are larger and "fluffier" than they would be with normal dosing, forming a less dense floc blanket that cannot effectively trap flocs and filteris less effective in trapping and filtering out flocs. As a result, the effluent turbidity is higher and the system fails to clean the water fully enoughconsistently yield an effluent turbidity of less than 1 NTU.