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Everpure ESO7 EV9607-25 Espresso Cartridge EV960725
EverpureThe Everpure ESO 7 EV960725 Cartridge has a unique three-stage blending process to provide softened, buffered, filtered water for specialty coffee,...
View full detailsOptiPure 300-05828 CTO-Q10 Cartridge
OptiPureThe Pentair OptiPure CTO-Q10 is a 10” Qwik-Twist cartridge for use in OptiPure QT10 Series Systems to reduce sediment down to 0.5-microns and reduc...
View full detailsOptiPure 170-52080 QT1+CR Cartridge Kit CTO-Q10 CTO-QCR
OptiPureReplacement filter cartridge kit for the OptiPure QT1+CR dual-cartridge water treatment system. Includes one (1) CTO-Q10 300-05828 Pre/Post-Filter ...
View full detailsEverpure DEV9830-01 HQS-WF Filter Cartridge
EverpureApplication: Produces perfect water for premium drinking water applications. Fits Everpure QL1 and QL3b heads. Part of a sanitary quick-change fil...
View full detailsOptiPure AMS-QT15 204-52820 Reverse Osmosis RO Membrane
OptiPureThe AMS-QT15 is a 10″ Qwik-Twist replacement membrane for BWS200 and OP175 systems that reduces Total Dissolved Solids (TDS), scale-causing mineral...
View full detailsChlorine, Taste, & Odor Reduction Filters
Chlorine is a disinfectant, most commonly used to kill microbes in the water supply. If excessive amounts or high concentrations reside in pipes and plumbing, chlorine can impart an undesirable taste and odor in your drinking water and other beverages. It can also contribute to foodservice equipment problems such as pitting and corrosion.
Chlorine is a widespread, naturally occurring chemical element manufactured from sodium chloride. It is widely used for everything from creating household bleach to manufacturing computer chips to disinfection of swimming pools. Most water utility companies add chlorine gas to raw water to kill bacteria and other harmful microorganisms to prevent waterborne diseases. While necessary for safe water, chlorine creates many problems for foodservice operations:
- Chlorine gas has a powerful, pungent smell and an unpleasant taste. It is detectable in concentrations of as low as 1 part per million (ppm).
- Chlorine is an oxidizing agent corrosive on metals in plumbing and foodservice equipment.
- Chlorine can cause damage to gaskets in equipment, making them brittle.
- Chlorine reacts with natural organic compounds in the water to form potentially harmful chemical by-products such as trihalomethanes (THMs).
- Chlorine is ineffective at killing cysts, which are living organisms that can cause illness. Examples of cysts include Giardia and Cryptosporidium.
Fortunately, chlorine is not challenging to remove from water. Carbon, found in many water filters, has a remarkable capacity for neutralizing chlorine. Activated carbon is a mild reducing agent, and chlorine is a potent oxidizing agent, so after chlorine becomes adsorbed, it reacts with the carbon. The chlorine is reduced to chloride ion (as in table salt and seawater), one atom of carbon is oxidized to carbon dioxide, and both are released to the solution (desorbed). Meanwhile, most of the spots on the activated carbon, where all this took place, become “auto-regenerated” back to their original, like new condition, ready to adsorb again. For free available chlorine (FAC), this takes only about fifteen minutes, which means that a small amount of carbon can achieve an acceptable steady-state condition if the flow rate is slow or intermittent. The reaction is much slower for “combined chlorine” (chloramines), and more carbon or contact time is needed to achieve equivalent reductions.