Skip to content

Blog

Iron & Manganese Removal

by Mark Timmons September 06, 2009 48 Comments

People have struggled with iron (also called "rust") and manganese removal since the dawn of time. Adam complained to Eve that his new t-shirts were stained orangish-red (OK, I just made that up!). Removal of iron has been the topic of discussion between water treatment dealers for years ("my water softener removes iron better than any other softener, etc."). The fact of the matter is that iron CAN be removed using an ion-exchange salt-regenerated water softener, but usually, a water softener doesn't do it very long or very effectively. The best water softeners for removing iron are those that have twin softening tanks (one is always in service), which regenerate with soft water and fill the brine tank with soft water. If you have a water softener that removes ALL the iron, consider yourself as lucky as winning the lottery. Softeners work well to do just what they are supposed to do - soften the water by removing the calcium and magnesium, but iron (rust) is another animal and to remove it effectively, it usually has to be oxidized. Neither iron nor manganese in water presents a health hazard. However, their presence in water may cause taste, staining, and accumulation problems.

How to oxidize iron is the subject of this blog post. Because iron and manganese are chemically similar, they cause similar problems. Iron will cause reddish-brown staining of laundry, porcelain, dishes, utensils, and even glassware. Manganese acts in a similar way but causes a brownish-black stain. Soaps and detergents do not remove these stains, and the use of chlorine bleach and alkaline builders (such as sodium carbonate) can actually intensify the stains. Iron and manganese deposits will build up in pipelines, pressure tanks, water heaters, and water softeners. This reduces the available quantity and pressure of the water supply. Iron and manganese accumulations become an economic problem when water supply or softening equipment must be replaced. There are also associated increased energy costs, like pumping water through constricted pipes or heating water with heating rods coated with iron or manganese minerals. Most iron filtration systems operate on the principal of oxidizing the iron (oxidation) to convert it from a ferrous (dissolved or soluble) to a ferric or undissolved state. Once in the ferric state, iron can be filtered. Water filters are the most widely used equipment in removing iron. Its popularity comes from its versatility due to the various media products available and the process involved with each media. The most common reasons for filter failure are a lack of flow in backwash or a lack of frequency of regenerations. Low pH levels when using filters are another reason for unsatisfactory results.

CHLORINATION SYSTEMS

For year, chlorine has been the oxidizer of choice. In addition to it's ability to oxidize iron, it also kills bacteria in the water. It does require a certain amount of contact time, so a drawback is that extra space is required for a retention tank (typically 24" x 72") or larger. Chlorine can be injected as a liquid before the pressure tank, or it can also be dropped down the well casing in the form of a pellet, using what is called a pellet chlorinator. This device is mounted on top of the well casing and is wired into the pump circuit, so that it runs when the well pump runs. You can calibrate it to drop pellets at whatever rate is needed to oxidize the iron at the source. Following injection of liquid chlorine or chlorine pellets, the chlorine and oxidized iron/sulfur needs to be removed by a back-washing carbon filter. It is an excellent idea to "oversize" the filters as chlorine combines with organics in the water to form trihalomethanes (THM"s) which are known carcinogens. Make sure your carbon filter is big enough to properly remove them. Water-Right, Inc. a company located in Appleton, Wisconsin has a very effective product called "The Sanitizer." The Sanitizer utilizes naturally silica zeolite, which is mined from the ground and is impervious to chlorine. During the brining cycle, two electrodes in the brine line generate large amounts of chlorine from the salt in the brine tank (NaCl is turned into Cl2). This is very effective at eradicating iron, manganese and even small amounts of sulfur.

GREENSAND FILTERS

Manganese greensand filters have generally been replaced with "Greensand Plus" media which is reported to be more effective at iron removal. Greensand is one of the oldest but proven oxidation technologies. Potassium permanganate, itself an oxidizer, is used to regenerate the greensand. In this application, potassium permanganate produces manganese dioxide on the surface of the mineral and — once the water comes in contact with it — any iron is immediately oxidized. The iron can be filtered and then cleaned away in the backwash cycle. Greensand is also effective with low levels of H2S (hydrogen sulfide) and manganese. Greensand Plus is a granular mineral with a manganese dioxide coating having the same ability as regular greensand. It is much lighter and requires less of a backwash rate than standard greensand. The main drawback is the potassium permanganate which is a harsh oxidizer and produces a vivid purple color if any of it is introduced into the water. The tank that holds the potassium permanganate is subject to overflow which leaves horrid purple (black) stains in its wake.

OZONE SYSTEMS

Injecting ozone into the water system is a very viable, albeit expensive, way to remove iron. Ozone is a powerful oxidizer and when used properly can be effective on large amounts of iron. Ozone is injected into water via a contact vessel as a pre-treatment to filtration. Ozone generators come in many designs and sizes and a full understanding of the process is necessary for success. Due to ozone's expense, it is usually applied on iron levels higher than normal filtration is known to handle effectively.

HYDROGEN PEROXIDE SYSTEMS

Hydrogen Peroxide (H2O2) is injected into the water ahead of a backwashing filter containing catalytic adsorptive carbon. The iron and manganese and sulfur are oxidized and the precipitate is trapped and later backwashed out, by the backwashing filter. H2O2 is composed of the elements of water - hydrogen and oxygen and is excellent at removing iron, manganese and sulfur. The only drawback is that you will have an annual hydrogen peroxide bill.

AIR INJECTION SYSTEMS

Oxygen in the air is an effective oxidizer and there are many ways to inject it into the water, including the use of "air pumps." A new development is the use of a valve that draws in a head of air and allows the iron to be fully oxidized before it goes through the media bed.

SPECIAL FILTERS (Birm, Filox, Pyrolox, Metal Ease, etc.)

Several companies make backwashing iron removal filters which remove iron utilizing special media with manganese dioxide being the key ingredient. Birm has the ability to remove iron and manganese and does not affect hydrogen sulfide. Like manganese dioxide, birm also uses dissolved oxygen as a catalyst and may require some type of pre-oxidation in cases where the dissolved oxygen content is too low to affect a maximum iron removal result. This technology is seldom the answer. Manganese dioxide is a naturally mined ore with the ability to remove iron, manganese, and hydrogen sulfide. The hydrogen sulfide capability exceeds that of either greensand or synthetic greensand and requires no chemicals to regenerate. It does, however, require adequate amounts of dissolved oxygen in the water as a catalyst and may require some type of pre-oxidation to achieve its maximum ability. Manganese dioxide is sold under the names of Filox, Pyrolox, Metal-Ease and Birm. Filox seems to be the best of the bunch.

KDF-85 Media

KDF-85 is a "Redox" media, which requires adequate dissolved oxygen to be effective, consists of two metals - 85 percent copper and 15 percent zinc. These two dissimilar metals create a small electrical field in the bed that will not allow bacterial growth in the media. This property earns redox the unique distinction of being effective on bacterial iron without the use of chlorine injection and being rated as bacteriostatic. Effective on removal of iron and hydrogen sulfide, able to reduce chlorine and heavy metals such as lead and mercury, redox is not effective with manganese. The biggest drawback for this media is its weight. Being almost twice as heavy as other minerals, it requires more than twice the backwash rate of other minerals.

More To Come

Prev Post
Next Post

48 Comments

January 28, 2015 Lindsey

Hello live in the Central FL area out in the country and love where I live but hate the water! We have a well and the water stains my clothes and the tile in shower. We had a water test but not 100% on the levels anymore but pretty sure the iron level was 9, and they said that was my biggest concern……please can you suggest the best and cheapest but reliable water softner or filter that we can get?

January 02, 2017 BK

We have a Katalox Light system that is not doing the job. I’ve been told this is because Katalox Light and other similar media all require that at least some dissolved oxygen be present in the water already. I’m a bit confused about this because one would not expect much dissolved oxygen from water hundreds of feet underground. I know rainwater theoretically carries some oxygen down into the subsoil, but it doesn’t seem to be doing much in our case because, as mentioned, the KL system isn’t doing much. So the question becomes how to introduce dissolved oxygen into the water? If I shock the well with peroxide it will temporarily get better, but the effect only lasts for a few days. I don’t really want to inject peroxide with a metering system if I don’t have to. Is there some media that can oxidize iron all by itself, without the need for pre-existing dissolved oxygen?

January 02, 2017 Mark Timmons

We used to use Katalox Light and the results were very unsatisfactory. Everyone has been looking for the Holy Grail with all the the medias that end in “LOX” – Filox, Pyrolox, Adox, Katalox, etc. There is also Birm and Manganese Greensand Plus. They all use a Manganese Dioxide on the media in varying amounts. Hydrogen Peroxide is a good oxidizer but pouring it down the well does very little. If you are going to use H2O2, you would want to inject it with a chemical injection system like this: https://www.uswatersystems.com/stenner-single-head-proportional-chemical-injection-system.html It needs to be injected just ahead of the backwashing filter tank, but Katalox or any “LOX” media is not really desireable with H2O2, This is the media that you use with H2O2: https://www.uswatersystems.com/jacobi-catalytic-granular-activated-carbon-compare-to-centaur.html We were one of the pioneers into H2O2 technology over 20 years ago and it is still the only method that I will GUARANTEE to remove iron and/or sulfur. Hydrogen Peroxide is composed of the elements of water and produces no disinfection by-products. The only drawback to H2O2 is that you have an annual peroxide bill, but your iron will be gone. You have to decide if it is worth the cost.

January 10, 2017 Barbara Glover

We have a Katalox filtration system. Is it ok for water after it’s been backwashed to go to our septic system? That is how the installer put it in but I wonder about the effects on the septic.

January 13, 2017 Mark Timmons

Yes, that should be fine as long as the tank can hold the volume of water.

January 18, 2017 jd phillips

our issue for our well is manganese. an old water test placed it at .2 ppm. no trace of iron. we have a sodium based softener at the moment but would like to avoid the added sodium in our diet. will the iron solutions outlined above work as well for manganese? any other suggestions specific to manganese? thanks

January 19, 2017 Mark Timmons

Do you have a detailed water test? I cannot answer that question without such a test. Here’s the best and most economical one we know of: https://www.uswatersystems.com/us-water-lab-water-test.html

February 19, 2017 Roger

Hi Mark – I am looking for a solution that wont cost thousands of dollars to resolve what is mostly an aesthetic issue. We have really dark, almost black, stains in the toilets and porcelain sink bowls, staining on the shower glass doors and light brown (Calcium/Lime??) stains on the tile sides of shower and bath. There is a slightly metallic taste, no sulfur smell, and the water will sting your eyes during a shower. Our private well water has 24MG/l Calcium, .36MG/l Iron, 9.9MG/l Magnesium, and .02MG/l Manganese. The water has a Hardness of 5.8 Grains/Gal, a TDS of 180MG/l and a PH of 7.2. Neither of us care for the somewhat “slimy” feel imparted by [most?] water softeners but I would still like to put in a remedy that: A) wont cost thousands up front, B) wont cost hundreds per year for filters or media, C) Will give a clear indication when something needs to be renewed.

February 20, 2017 Mark Timmons

Roger, This is what I would recommend: https://www.uswatersystems.com/synergy-twin-alternating-metered-water-softener.html It regenerates with soft water and fills the brine tanks with soft water, so it does an excellent job at softening, removing iron and removing manganese while using the least amount of salt possible. Let me know if you have questions.

March 15, 2017 Katie Warchol

Is Greensand plus safe to drink, sounds scary? Thanks

March 15, 2017 Mark Timmons

Not in my book.

April 05, 2017 Hank

Is it possible to replace the media in a greensand filter and convert it to an air injection system? My greensand is done and pot perm is getting expensive and harder to get. Apparently nefarious characters use can use it for non-friendly means!

April 07, 2017 Mark Timmons

It is possible, but I have a few questions first: 1. Do you have a detailed water analysis? The levels of iron, manganese, pH and other competing contaminants are essential before you do that. 2. What is the size of your tank? 3. How many in the family and how many bathrooms? Once I know that, I can better advise you. If you don’t have a good water test, he is the best deal on the planet: https://www.uswatersystems.com/us-water-lab-water-test.html

April 16, 2017 Robert B Wassung

We need some advise about iron/ manganese removal from our shared well system. We would rather not use a salt-based system because of the complications we have with back-washing, so we were wondering if the no-salt conditioning would be an answer. We don’t need the “softening” of the salt-based system, but have struggled for years with the orange stains in both water fixtures and clothing. Can you give advise. We live in rural Connecticut.

May 02, 2017 Todd Rich

I have well system, that uses a chlorine pulsafeeder injection system with a contact tank, then carbon filter, and finally a softner. it does a great a job of removing the smell. However I tend have a heavy solid black particle buildup in my hot water tank. Can’t use mu hot tub because it seems thats where it ends up at the end of the water line. When my chlorine injection system clogs, blackish water and black film in the toilets appear, then the smell. That’s when I know I need to clean the injected lines. How do I get rid of the black buildup in the hot water?

Leave a comment

Please note, comments need to be approved before they are published.

Someone recently bought a
[time] ago, from [location]

Thanks for subscribing!

This email has been registered!

Shop the look

Choose Options

Edit Option
Back In Stock Notification
this is just a warning
Login
Shopping Cart
0 items