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Product Overview
WatPro is the premier water treatment
simulator for predicting water quality based on specific treatment
processes and chemical addition (e.g. alum, ferric chloride, NaOH,
lime). WatPro uses raw water quality parameters such as pH, TOC and
SUVA, and design and operating characteristics of process tanks, to
simulate plant operation.
WatPro Version 2 features modeling disinfection with
chlorine dioxide
• Calculated Turbidity Reductions by Process & Whole Facility
• Calculated Specific UV Absorbance (SUVA) in Raw Water
• New Utilities (calculator, file recall, notepad)
• Improved Reporting and Calibration Options
• Models CLO2 Disinfection, Consumption & DBP Formation
• Includes Use of Ferrous Salts for Removing Residuals
It's easy to configure your plant processes in WatPro
Use WatPro to:
• minimize formation of DBPs (e.g. THMs, HAAs,
chlorite, chlorate)
• compare inactivation of viruses and Giardia by
chlorine, ozone, chlorine dioxide and chloramines
• calculate Ct for any location in the treatment system
• optimize plant operation by allowing chemical
addition points to be varied or by tank baffling
• estimate treated water quality for a proposed change
in plant operation.
WatPro has a user-friendly interface that allows a
schematic of the water treatment plant to be easily configured within
minutes. Results can be viewed either on-screen, printed a
user-formatted hard copy report or saved to electronic files for
further processing.
WatPro
treatment processes
• Flocculation tanks
• Settling tanks
• Channels
• Filters
• Membrane processes
• Granular activated carbon
• Contact chambers
• Clear wells
• Reservoirs.
WatPro
is a highly effective instructional and training tool
WatPro is so instructive and easy to use that it has
been adopted as a teaching tool in university courses in Canada and
England. It has also been accepted for use in a laboratory assignment
in the forthcoming Laboratory Manual published by the Association of
Environmental Engineering and Science Professors.
Learn more about the use of WatPro
as an instructional and training tool with this published article from
Environmental Science and Engineering Magazine's November, 1999 issue.
WatPro Unit
Processes, Features and Benefits
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