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Groundwater is one of the world's most important freshwater resources, supplying drinking water to billions of people and supporting agricultural, industrial, and municipal operations across every continent. While groundwater is often perceived as cleaner than surface water — naturally filtered through geological formations — it presents its own set of treatment challenges that require specialized chemical dosing and process control solutions.

Unlike surface water, which typically contains suspended solids, algae, and organic matter, groundwater contamination is primarily chemical in nature. Dissolved iron and manganese, arsenic, hydrogen sulfide, hardness, and elevated levels of naturally occurring minerals are the most common challenges. These contaminants may not always pose immediate health risks at low concentrations, but they affect water aesthetics, damage distribution infrastructure, and — in the case of arsenic — represent serious public health concerns that are subject to increasingly stringent regulatory limits worldwide.

Milton Roy provides the high-precision metering pumps, chemical dosing systems, and process control technologies that groundwater treatment plants need to consistently meet quality standards — from small community wellhead systems to large-scale municipal supply operations.

Common Groundwater Contaminants and Treatment Approaches

Dissolved iron (Fe²⁺) and manganese (Mn²⁺) are among the most widespread groundwater quality issues globally. While secondary (aesthetic) maximum contaminant levels are set at 0.3 mg/L for iron and 0.05 mg/L for manganese, even lower concentrations can cause discolored water, staining of fixtures and laundry, metallic taste, and buildup in distribution pipes that reduces capacity and pressure over time.

The standard treatment approach involves oxidation followed by filtration. Aeration, chlorination, or dosing of potassium permanganate (KMnO₄) converts soluble ferrous iron to insoluble ferric hydroxide (Fe(OH)₃) and soluble manganese to manganese dioxide (MnO₂), which can then be removed by greensand or multimedia filtration. 

Milton Roy metering pumps provide the dosing accuracy and chemical resistance needed to inject oxidants — including sodium hypochlorite, potassium permanganate, and hydrogen peroxide — at precisely controlled rates that respond to variable raw water quality conditions. Flow-proportional dosing ensures that chemical consumption is optimized and residual oxidant levels remain within acceptable limits.

Why Groundwater Treatment Requires Different Equipment Than Surface Water

Surface water treatment plants are designed around the removal of suspended solids through coagulation, flocculation, sedimentation, and filtration — processes that involve high-volume chemical dosing and large-scale mixing. Groundwater treatment, by contrast, typically focuses on dissolved contaminant removal through targeted oxidation and precipitation, often at much lower chemical concentrations and flow rates. This demands metering pumps with exceptional low-end accuracy, high turndown ratios (up to 1000:1 with Milton Roy variable-speed technology), and robust chemical compatibility with aggressive oxidants and corrosive treatment chemicals.

Milton Roy's portfolio of hydraulic diaphragm and motor-driven metering pumps provides groundwater operators with the flexibility to select the right technology for every application — from low-flow wellhead chlorination to high-capacity centralized treatment facilities.

Surface Water Treatment vs. Groundwater Treatment: Understanding the Key Differences

Surface water and groundwater require different treatment strategies. Surface water is more exposed to runoff, microorganisms, and changing conditions, while groundwater is typically more stable but often contains higher levels of dissolved minerals, metals, or gases

 

Water Source Characteristics

Factor

Surface Water

Groundwater

Typical source

Rivers, lakes, reservoirs, and streams.

Wells and underground aquifers.

Turbidity / suspended solids

Usually higher because it is exposed to soil runoff, algae, and seasonal events.

Usually lower because water has been naturally filtered through soil and rock.

Microbial risk

Higher risk of pathogens such as Giardia, Cryptosporidium, and viruses.

Generally lower microbial risk, but contamination can still occur if the source is vulnerable or fecally impacted.

Organic matter (TOC / NOM)

Generally higher, which can increase disinfection by-product formation potential.

Generally lower than surface water.

Dissolved minerals / metals

Often lower than groundwater.

Often higher levels of iron, manganese, hardness, arsenic, or other dissolved constituents.

Water quality stability

More variable due to rainfall, drought, seasonal turnover, and algae.

Usually more stable over time.

Regulatory / Operational Differences

Aspect

Surface Water

Groundwater

Main U.S. EPA rule

Governed by the Surface Water Treatment Rules (SWTRs)

Governed by the Ground Water Rule (GWR).

Regulatory focus

Strong emphasis on pathogen removal/inactivation, turbidity control, and filtration performance. 

Focus on vulnerability to fecal contamination, corrective action, and virus treatment where needed.

Monitoring burden

Typically heavier because turbidity and treatment performance are central compliance parameters.

Often lighter unless the source is contaminated, deficient, or subject to additional corrective actions.

When groundwater is treated like surface water

Not applicable.

If a source is GWUDI (groundwater under the direct influence of surface water), it becomes subject to surface-water-style requirements.

 

Chemicals Commonly Dosed in Groundwater Treatment

Milton Roy equipment is fully compatible with the full range of groundwater treatment chemicals, including sodium hypochlorite, potassium permanganate (KMnO₄), hydrogen peroxide, chlorine dioxide, ferric chloride, ferric sulfate, lime and sodium hydroxide (for pH correction), soda ash (sodium carbonate), carbon dioxide, and phosphate-based corrosion inhibitors.

Milton Roy: Trusted Precision for Groundwater Treatment Worldwide

With thousands of installations in groundwater treatment systems across the globe, Milton Roy metering pumps and dosing systems are proven to deliver the accuracy, reliability, and chemical resistance that these critical applications demand. 

Our global service network and experienced application specialists support operators from initial system design through commissioning and long-term maintenance — ensuring safe, compliant groundwater supply for communities and industries that depend on it.

Treating Groundwater? Let's Specify the Right Solution Together.

Our application engineers help you select the optimal pump technology, materials of construction, and system configuration for your specific groundwater chemistry. Contact us for a consultation.