The Hillsborough Water Treatment Plant is the processing plant for your water. The plant takes raw water from the Eno River. It then adds ingredients and applies processes to the water to make it usable. The plant focuses on:
- First — Cleanliness and compliance with standards.
- Second — Taste, odor and appearance.
Water Treatment
Converting raw water into drinking water includes injecting chemicals at multiple points to help remove organic material, disinfect the water and ensure longer freshness before releasing it for use by the community.
The chemical process starts before the raw water reaches the Water Treatment Plant. Water released from the town's reservoir travels to Lake Ben Johnston, where the town removes water for use. At this intake location, a chemical is added to help particles in the water combine for easier removal.
At the plant, more chemicals are added for the same reason and to adjust the water's color, acidity and alkalinity.
Filtering Out Materials
The water then goes through several filtration, aeration and clarification stages. In these stages, the water remains in large basins while being mixed at slower and slower speeds. This allows the combined large materials to drop to the bottom of the basins.
Finally, the clear water moves through a fine filtration system to remove remaining particles. At this stage, the water’s turbidity is measured and filtration adjustments are made to remove any cloudiness from the water caused by large amounts of particles that are otherwise invisible to the eye.
Adjusting Treatment
The water is then disinfected and final adjustments to acidity and alkalinity are made before the water is pumped through pipes to homes and businesses.
Throughout the treatment process, employees test the water for more than 150 contaminants, making adjustments to the treatment as needed.
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