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Iron Bacteria
What You Need to Know
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What are iron bacteria?
Iron bacteria are
commonly cited as the culprit for any “slime” problems found in a
well. Interestingly enough, though, only a very small percentage of
the slime seen in wells and pipelines is actually iron bacteria
(also referred to as iron oxidizing bacteria or by its proper name,
Gallionella). Most of the slime formation found in wells is by
naturally occurring soil bacteria, not iron bacteria.
What are signs that my water may have iron bacteria?
A professional water well contractor can check your well for
physical signs of contamination, such as debris in the pipelines.
Also, a laboratory can analyze the chemistry of your water. The
specific chemistry of your well water may help identify problems and
help determine treatment options. Here are features that might
indicate problems (listed in order of what is most likely to
indicate a specific problem, to least likely).
Your well might have incrustive (plugging) problems if:
- pH is greater than 7.0
- Calcium hardness is greater than 200 ppm
- Iron is greater than 1.0 ppm
- Manganese is greater than .02 ppm
- Sulfates are greater than 50 ppm
- Phosphates are greater than 1 ppm
Your well might have corrosive problems if:
- Total dissolved solids (TDS) are greater than 600 ppm
- Stray DC current on an electrical line*
- Stray DC current in the ground*
- pH is less than 7.0
- Dissolved oxygen is greater than 2 ppm
- Carbon dioxide is greater than 50 ppm
- Chlorides are greater than 500 ppm
*Can be measured by
a local electric company that truly understands DC current or a
pipeline company that understands corrosion potentials. One volt
of DC current can dissolve up to 20 pounds of steel in a year.
What problems do iron bacteria cause?
The
slime generated by iron bacteria isn’t a health hazard, but it can
do damage in other ways. Along with the unpleasant odor, it can
corrode pipes and plumbing equipment, and clog pipes, screens, and
other components of the well system. The slime can also hamper the
effectiveness of the well system’s water treatment components. It
can overwhelm carbon filters, defeat bactericidal resins, and attack
or plug reverse osmosis membranes and cartridge filters. In certain
conditions, the bacteria can grow quickly and leave the entire well
system virtually useless in just a few months.
How can iron bacteria be avoided?
Iron
bacteria can be a major nuisance, so the best protection is
prevention. This means making sure that everything related to your
home water system is disinfected. When having your well system
installed, tested, or repaired, always use a professional
contractor. During installation of the well, check that the pipe,
pump, tools, and water used are disinfected.
What can be done to treat iron bacteria in water?
In order to remove iron bacteria from water, the chemical treatment
must have the capability of penetrating the slime, removing the live
bacteria, dissolving the decaying debris totally so the nutrient is
gone, and removing everything from the well. That not only requires
the proper chemistry but good development techniques, a monitoring
process on the site to determine when the well is clean, and good
removal pumping from the bottom of the well, once the project is
complete. All well components (e.g., pump, cable, etc.) should be
thoroughly cleaned before placing back in the well. If a pipeline is
more than 20 percent plugged, it should be cleaned. If pipelines are
less than 20 percent plugged and if the well is cleaned properly,
the counts of bacteria will be as in a normal aquifer, and
eventually the pipeline will clean itself.
What is fungus?
Fungus is very slimy but much
more of a stable mass than slime bacteria. It is often multicolored
with red, black, white, and gray throughout the mass. It often
smells like a sewer and the odor is quite offensive. This debris
does not break down in acidic solutions.
Where can I get more information?
For more
information on your private water well, contact Steve Foster:
Spectrum Geotechnical Services Ltd.
Silvershares Place Suite 8 & 9 Km 15 Lagos-Epe Expressway,
Jakande, Lekki Phase 1,
Lagos, Nigeria.
Tel: (234) 482-4966
Mobile: (234) 803-344-4404, 803-302-4953
E-Mail: info@spectrumgeotech.com
Also, visit the Web site of the National Ground Water
Association, http://www.ngwa.org/, and its site
just for well owners, http://www.wellowner.org/
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