N.J. Admin. Code § 7:10-12.32 - Disinfection of public noncommunity and nonpublic water systems
(a) General regulations
for disinfection are as follows:
1. Disinfection
shall be accomplished using chlorination, ultra-violet light, or ozonation, in
accordance with the methods described in (b), (c) or (d) below.
2. The owner of any public noncommunity water
system with an extensive service area shall maintain a detectable disinfectant
residual in the water distribution system. For purposes of this subsection, an
extensive service area is 100 service connections or 1500 linear feet of water mains
or gravity storage.
3. Chlorine
disinfection shall be accomplished in accordance with the chlorine contact period
and residual requirements set forth in
7:10-11.16(e).
(b) Regulations for chlorination are as
follows:
1. The administrative authority shall
approve the use of gas chlorination for public noncommunity and nonpublic water
systems only if the use of hypochlorite feed systems are impractical for the
specific application.
2. The
chlorinating device shall be capable of producing a chlorine residual after the
contact period as required pursuant to
7:10-11.16(e)3. A
chlorine residual test kit shall be used to verify that the correct application rate
is maintained.
3. The chlorination
device shall be protected from freezing.
4. Gas chlorinating devices shall be located in
above-grade separate rooms with an outside entrance only and shall have proper
ventilation including an exhaust fan near floor level with an outside switch. An
observation window to permit visual inspection without opening the door of the
chlorine room shall be provided. The doors of such rooms shall open outward and
shall be provided with panic type hardware (that is, a push bar for opening the
door) on the inside of the door. A room heater shall be provided. Chlorine scale and
storage rooms shall be equipped in the same manner.
5. Operation of the chlorinating devices shall be
synchronized with the operation of the well pump.
(c) Regulations for disinfection by ultra-violet
light are as follows:
1. Ultra-violet tubes shall
be jacketed so that a temperature of 105 degrees Fahrenheit is maintained.
2. The jacket on the ultra-violet light tubes
shall be quartz or high-silica glass with similar optical characteristics.
3. The ultra-violet light disinfection unit shall
be designed to permit frequent mechanical cleaning of the water contact surface of
the ultra-violet light tube jacket without disassembly of the unit.
4. The maximum water depth in the disinfection
chamber, measured from the ultra-violet light tube surface to the outer walls of the
chamber, shall not exceed three inches.
5. Ultra-violet radiation at a level of 2,537
Angstrom shall be applied at all points throughout the disinfection chamber at a
minimum rate of 16,000 microwatt seconds per square centimeter.
6. An automatic flow control valve, accurate
within the expected pressure range, shall be installed to restrict flow to the
maximum design flow of the ultra-violet disinfection unit.
7. An accurately calibrated ultra-violet light
intensity meter, filtered to confine its sensitivity to the range of disinfection
spectrum, shall be installed in the wall of the disinfection chamber at the point of
greatest water depth from the light transmitting source.
8. A flow diversion valve or automatic shut-off
valve controlled by the ultra-violet light intensity meter shall be installed so as
to permit water flow into the water system only when the minimum radiation level
specified at (c)5 is applied. When power is not being supplied to the unit, the
valve shall be in a closed (fail-safe) position to prevent the flow of water into
the water system.
9. The ultra-violet
light disinfection unit shall be installed in a manner such that it cannot be
bypassed.
(d) Rules for
disinfection by ozonation are as follows:
1.
Ozonation may be used for disinfection of any public noncommunity or nonpublic water
system.
2. Ozonation shall not be used
as a substitute for postchlorination if the water system is required to maintain a
chlorine residual in the distribution system pursuant to (a) 2 above.
3. Equipment used for ozonation shall be durable
and corrosion resistant.
Notes
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