The following article is a
great summary for the uses of
granulated activated carbon
(GAC) as a water filter medium... for
those interested.
Carbon Filtration:
What It Does, What It Doesn’t
by Gene Franks,
Pure Water Products
The largest single section in the
of the “EPA Regulated Water
Contaminants” published in Water Technology magazine,
is the section on Organics
(including VOCs, or “Volatile
Organics”). In this category the EPA
lists 32 very nasty chemical
contaminants—many with familiar
names like benzene, 1,1
dichlorethylene, carbon
tetrachloride, dioxin, styrene,
toluene, chloroform, and vinyl
chloride. To give an idea of the
extensiveness of this list, a single
one of the 32 items is “Total
Trihalomethanes,” a category made up
of still uncounted chemicals,
assumed to number in the thousands,
that are formed when water
containing organic matter (i. e.,
virtually all water) is treated with
chlorine. The maximum allowable
level for trihalomethanes, which are
suspected cancer causers and are
present in virtually all chlorinated
tap water, is only 1/10 of one part
per million. For the Organics
category, the primary treatment in
all cases and the only
recommended treatment in most cases,
is activated carbon.
The EPA’s Pesticides category
lists 14 familiar poisons such as
Aldicarb, Chlordane, Heptachlor, and
Lindane. In all 14 cases, activated
carbon is the only
recommended treatment. Of the 12
Herbicides listed (2,4-D, Atrazine,
etc.), activated carbon is the only treatment recommended.
For Organics, Pesticides, and
Herbicides, the standard treatment,
and in most cases the only treatment
recommended, is activated carbon.
When people say water filter,
they most frequently mean a carbon
filter of some variety, because
since the Egyptians discovered that
storing water in charcoal made it
stay fresher and taste better,
carbon has been a standard feature
in water treatment. Its centuries of
popularity attest to its
effectiveness.
What carbon filtration doesn’t do
can be seen in the remaining three
categories of the EPA contaminant
list. Carbon is mentioned as a
treatment for only one of the four
Microbiological contaminants listed:
turbidity. It is not recommended for
coliform removal or for cysts,
though ironically, some of the very
tight solid carbon block filters now
on the market remove bacteria
(though manufacturers seldom make
this claim) and cysts like giardia
and cryptosporidium quite handily.
Multi-Pure solid carbon blocks, in
fact, were the first filtration
device certified by NSF (the most
prestigious independent agency that
tests and certifies product
performance) for removal of
cryptosporidium. Multi-Pure and some
other very tight carbon block
filters remove cysts simply because
of their restricted pore size.
Multi-Pure blocks are absolute 1/2
micron filters, making
cryptosporidium organisms about ten
times too fat to go through the
holes. Thus, although other types of
very tight filtration might work as
well, the very dense carbon block
filters now on the market are very
effective against certain forms of
microbiological contaminants.
The same is true in the Inorganic
category. Activated carbon itself
appears in the EPA list as a
preferred treatment only for
mercury, but carbon block filters
can also be engineered to remove
lead. Some are NSF-certified for
lead removal and for asbestos
removal. By and large, however,
removal of inorganics is the
property of reverse osmosis,
distillers, and ion exchange
systems.
The same is true in the final
category, Radionuclides, where
carbon is ineffective and reverse
osmosis (RO) and ion exchange are
definitely the treatments of choice.
If you are considering a home
water filtration system, here are
some things to keep in mind:
Chlorine was not considered in
the discussion above because EPA
does not consider it a water
contaminant. Although this is
patently absurd, it is also
politically expedient and not likely
to change soon. (Keep in mind that
all EPA maximum contaminant
allowables are politically
negotiated figures that do not
necessarily have any basis in
reality. They represent a compromise
between the ideal and what can
practically be done by water
treatment plants.) Chlorine removal
is what carbon is best at, and
nothing else equals carbon’s ability
to remove chlorine.
When distiller sellers or zealous
MLMers show you a chart that
indicates that reverse osmosis (RO)
units do not remove chlorine or
certain chemicals, keep in mind that
RO units contain one or more carbon
filters. In fact, “thin film” RO
units, the most common type, must
remove all chlorine from the water
as the very first operation else the
unit’s membrane will be destroyed.
Such statements are simply
advertising cheap shots that are
technically true but practically
false. [The truth is that the RO
membrane does not remove chlorine,
but that the carbon filter that
precedes it does.] Distillers,
similarly, have great problems with
chlorine and VOC removal. Tap water
should always be carbon filtered
before distillation, else the VOCs
and chlorine will re-enter the
distilled water or will be released
into the air for you to breathe.
Contaminants that people most
frequently want removed that are not
readily removed by carbon filtration
are
fluoride,
arsenic, nitrates, and sodium.
Reverse osmosis and distillation
remove all three, so either combined
with a high quality carbon filter
provides complete treatment. All
three can also be removed by
selective, non-carbon filters
designed for the purpose. For
example, you can obtain a double
filter with one fluoride and one
carbon cartridge if fluoride removal
is desired.
All carbon filters are not
created equal. Some perform much
better than others, and some are
designed for selected special
purposes. Performance depends upon
the amount and the type of carbon,
the way the filter is designed, and
the residence time of the water.
Carbon blocks in general work better
than GAC (granular activated carbon)
filters, though many of the latter
can do a fine job. GAC is usually of
the consistency of coffee grounds,
so it is subject to “channeling” and
“fluidizing.” If you don’t believe
that water can cut channels, look at
the Grand Canyon. In general, solid carbon
blocks keep the carbon in place and
do not let it wash away.
Filter carbon is a manufactured
product. Though it is sometimes
erroneously called charcoal, it is
actually a carbon material that has
been treated by steam and high
temperature in the absence of
oxygen.
There are many types of carbon.
Most filter carbon is manufactured
from coal, but other substances like
wood and nut shells are also used.
Coconut shell carbon is becoming
popular not only because it is made
from a renewable resource but also
because it produces very good
tasting water and is particularly
good at trihalomethane removal. A
new specialty carbon called
catalytic carbon is now available
that will remove hydrogen sulfide
gas (which produces the “rotten egg”
smell in some well water) and is
very good at removing chloramines
(the mixture of ammonia and chlorine
used as a disinfectant by some water
supplies).
Carbon filters remove chemicals
by the process of adsorption (as
opposed to absorption). Webster’s
Collegiate Dictionary defines
adsorption as “the adhesion in a
thin layer of molecules to the
surfaces of solid bodies in which
they are in contact.” Carbon
attracts certain chemicals at the
molecular level much in the way that
a magnet attracts and holds metal
filings. When the surfaces are full,
the filter must be discarded and
replaced.
Timely cartridge replacement is
very important, because filter
carbon has different capacity for
different contaminants. Many people
rely on chlorine removal tests to
determine when filter carbon should
be renewed. This works only if
chlorine removal is all you expect
from the filter. Most carbon filters
will begin to “leak” other chemicals
long before they begin to allow
chlorine to pass. For example, the
MatriKX 1+ extruded carbon block
used in most PWP RO units and carbon
filtration units has an amazing
20,000 gallon chlorine removal
capacity (when operated at .75
gallons per minute), but the same
filter loses its effectiveness at
trihalomethane removal at about 750
gallons. It should, therefore, be
replaced annually although it will
still have lots of chlorine removal
capacity left.
Filter makers rate filters in
“microns.” Microns are a size
measurement of the pore size, so the
smaller the number, the tighter the
filter. CTO stands for “Chlorine,
Taste, Odor” and means that the
maker is saying only that the filter
will remove chlorine and improve
taste and odor. The filter might do
more, but the maker isn't
guaranteeing it. CTO-grade
cartridges are usually about 10
microns in pore size. Five-micron
filters remove more chemicals but
will plug up faster if there is
heavy particulate matter in the
water. One-micron filters are for
drinking water only. In general,
they are too tight to filter large
amounts of water without slowing the
flow to unacceptable levels. The new
MatriKX CeramiKX block are
half-microns blocks.
Filter makers also use the words
“absolute” and “nominal” to describe
their products’ micron ratings.
Absolute means absolute. Nominal
means “more or less.” Our CeramiKX
.5 micron blocks are absolute .5
micron. That’s as tight as it is
practical to make a carbon filter.
If it gets tighter, the water won’t
go through. The MatriKX +1 is a
nominal one micron, meaning it’s
very good at getting things in the
one to two micron range and larger.
There is in effect a law of
diminishing returns in carbon
filters. In some ways, the more they
do, the shorter their lifespan.
Simply stated, a very tight filter
plugs up fast because it catches
everything. A "carbon-only" drinking water filter
that promises to last three or five
years can do so only because it lets
everything smaller than a tennis
ball pass.
To summarize, carbon is an
extremely versatile and highly
effective water treatment medium. It
has immense surface area. A single
pound of granular activated carbon
has a filtering surface area
equivalent to 125 acres! It is the
best known treatment for organic
chemicals, VOCs, pesticides,
herbicides, and chlorine and its
by-products. It is also an
unchallenged taste-and-odor
improver. When arranged in solid
carbon or extruded carbon block
format, it also provides very high
quality particulate filtration, in
some cases down into the sub-micron
level.
For a more complete indicator on these an other
pollutants, please see this "White Paper" on
The Ability of Activated Carbon to Remove Various
Substances From Water.
This amazing filter's patented
design uses 6 full pounds of the
highest quality coconut shell carbon,
AFTER 5 other beds pre-filter
it! (Most filter designs we've
seen use the GAC at the beginning of
the filtration process, creating a
need to constantly replace the
cartridges. This ingenious design,
along with the efficient back wash
cycle makes this filter the new
standard. No GAC filter
replacement needed for 10-15 years!!