Integrated Flushing and Corrosion Control Measures to Reduce Lead Exposure in Households with Lead Service Lines †

Journal Article (2025)
Author(s)

Fatemeh Hatam (Polytechnique Montreal)

Mirjam Blokker (KWR Water Research Institute, TU Delft - Civil Engineering & Geosciences)

Michele Prevost (Polytechnique Montreal)

Research Group
Water Systems Engineering
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152297 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Research Group
Water Systems Engineering
Journal title
Water (Switzerland)
Issue number
15
Volume number
17
Article number
2297
Downloads counter
81
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Abstract

The quality of water in households can be affected by plumbing design and materials, water usage patterns, and source water quality characteristics. These factors influence stagnation duration, disinfection residuals, metal release, and microbial activity. In particular, stagnation can degrade water quality and increase lead release from lead service lines. This study employs numerical modeling to assess how combined corrosion control and flushing strategies affect lead levels in household taps with lead service lines under reduced water use. To estimate potential health risks, the U.S. EPA model is used to predict the percentage of children likely to exceed safe blood lead levels. Lead exceedances are assessed based on various regulatory requirements. Results show that exceedances at the kitchen tap range from 3 to 74% of usage time for the 5 µg/L standard, and from 0 to 49% for the 10 µg/L threshold, across different scenarios. Implementing corrosion control treatment in combination with periodic flushing proves effective in lowering lead levels under the studied low-consumption scenarios. Under these conditions, the combined strategy limits lead exceedances above 5 µg/L to only 3% of usage time, with none above 10 µg/L. This demonstrates its value as a practical short-term strategy for households awaiting full pipe replacement. Targeted flushing before peak water use reduces the median time that water remains stagnant in household pipes from 8 to 3 h at the kitchen tap under low-demand conditions. Finally, the risk model indicates that the combined approach can reduce the predicted percentage of children with blood lead levels exceeding 5 μg/dL from 61 to 6% under low water demand.