{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"461 Corrosion, Lead, and Algae: New Tools for Old Water Problems","description":"Corrosion rarely announces itself as a \u201cbig water problem.\u201d It shows&amp;nbsp;up as&amp;nbsp;leaching at the tap, residual loss in the field, premature equipment replacement, and the slow, expensive erosion of decision-quality.&amp;nbsp;  Pat Rosenstiel&amp;nbsp;(CEO) and&amp;nbsp;Wolf Merker&amp;nbsp;(chemist\/Chief Science Officer) of&amp;nbsp;Great Water Tech&amp;nbsp;lay out a system-wide view of corrosion control\u2014starting with what changed in Flint from a technical&amp;nbsp;standpoint and&amp;nbsp;moving into why many utilities still struggle to meet expectations when standards and risk assumptions shift.&amp;nbsp;  System-wide corrosion control starts with chemistry and consequences&amp;nbsp; A source-water change can shift corrosivity fast. If corrosion control does not adjust proactively, the downstream effects&amp;nbsp;show&amp;nbsp;in&amp;nbsp;metal release and public exposure. Wolf stresses the distinction between the technical problem and the political challenges, then points to corrosion control as a solvable technical matter when it is treated as a system condition\u2014not a single asset issue.&amp;nbsp;  Why \u201cphosphate-only\u201d&amp;nbsp;isn\u2019t&amp;nbsp;the end of the story&amp;nbsp; Trace frames what most operators recognize: many municipalities use phosphate inhibitors to form a tenacious film and reduce corrosion. Wolf argues phosphates are \u201ca little bit of old news\u201d in&amp;nbsp;practice and&amp;nbsp;explains the approach Great Water Tech discusses with their German partners\u2014using phosphates and silicates together in the right amounts to create a tighter separation between water and metal.&amp;nbsp;  Barriers, biology, and the disinfection tradeoff&amp;nbsp; Wolf breaks corrosion drivers into three sources: chemical, biological, and electrochemical (dissimilar metal corrosion). He also ties corrosion to cascading operational decisions\u2014especially disinfectant strategy. If residual loss pushes a system from chlorine to chloramine, Wolf warns that corrosivity can increase dramatically, and that corrosion can amplify the formation of disinfection byproducts as chlorine reacts with what is in the water.&amp;nbsp;  What industrial water treaters should listen for&amp;nbsp; Pat connects the same barrier logic to industrial priorities\u2014CapEx,&amp;nbsp;OpEx, and lifecycle extension in closed systems (cooling towers, closed chilled loops, boilers). Wolf clarifies that closed systems require different product \u201cflavors,\u201d while keeping the core concept consistent: the combined silicate\/phosphate approach&amp;nbsp;remains&amp;nbsp;the best path he is aware of.&amp;nbsp; Listen to the full conversation above. Explore related episodes below. Stay engaged, keep learning, and continue scaling up your knowledge!&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; Timestamps&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; 02:20 - Trace sets the tone for the episode: decision-quality improves when you \u201crethink the way that you think you know things,\u201d especially around tests and procedures&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; 08:20&amp;nbsp;- Words of Water with James McDonald&amp;nbsp; 11:00&amp;nbsp;-&amp;nbsp;Upcoming Events for Water Treatment Professionals&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; 18:22&amp;nbsp;-&amp;nbsp;Interview with&amp;nbsp;Pat Rosenstiel, CEO of Great Water Tech &amp;amp; Wolf Merker, Chief Science Officer of Great Water Tech&amp;nbsp; 23:00&amp;nbsp;-&amp;nbsp;Flint technical breakdown&amp;nbsp; 27:30 - Corrosion control options&amp;nbsp; 32:20 - Scale vs. Corrosion&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; 43:40 \u2013 Algae Control Pivot&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; Connect with&amp;nbsp;Pat Rosenstiel&amp;nbsp; Website:&amp;nbsp;Great Water Tech | Water Treatment Solutions&amp;nbsp; LinkedIn:&amp;nbsp;https:\/\/www.linkedin.com\/in\/pat-rosenstiel-a148952\/&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Great Water Tech LLC: Overview | LinkedIn&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; Connect with&amp;nbsp;Wolf Merker&amp;nbsp; Website:&amp;nbsp;Great Water Tech | Water Treatment Solutions&amp;nbsp; LinkedIn:&amp;nbsp;https:\/\/www.linkedin.com\/in\/wolf-merker-a1b95284\/&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Great Water Tech LLC: Overview | LinkedIn&amp;nbsp;   &amp;nbsp; Guest Resources Mentioned&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; NSF\/ANSI\/CAN 60 \u2014 Drinking Water Treatment Chemicals: Health Effect&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; NSF \u2014 Drinking Water Treatment Chemicals Certification (NSF\/ANSI\/CAN 60)&amp;nbsp;(how certification works)&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; ANSI Webstore listing (official standard access\/purchase)&amp;nbsp; EPA \u2014 Lead and Copper Rule (regulation hub)&amp;nbsp; EPA \u2014 Lead and Copper Rule Improvements (LCRI) (final rule page)&amp;nbsp; EPA fact sheet \u2014 Tap Monitoring Requirements (LCRI)&amp;nbsp;(sampling protocol changes)&amp;nbsp; Great Water Tech&amp;nbsp; Folmar&amp;nbsp;(Great Water Tech) \u2014 corrosion inhibitor (phosphate + silicate blend)&amp;nbsp; Algae Armor (Great Water Tech) \u2014 nutrient-binding tool for ponds\/lakes&amp;nbsp; EPA Distribution System Toolbox&amp;nbsp;\u2014 Pigging fact sheet (PDF) (removing biofilm\/scale\/sediment from mains)&amp;nbsp; U.S. Bureau of Reclamation report page&amp;nbsp;(chlorine vs chloramine&amp;nbsp;impacts&amp;nbsp;incl. corrosion\/leaching discussion)&amp;nbsp; AWWA&amp;nbsp;Opflow&amp;nbsp;article (main cleaning techniques incl. pigging):&amp;nbsp;AWWA\u2019s utility-facing perspective on cleaning options&amp;nbsp; Silicate corrosion inhibitors&amp;nbsp; Historical context for silicate\u2013phosphate combinations&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; Scaling UP! H2O Resources Mentioned&amp;nbsp; AWT&amp;nbsp;(Association of Water Technologies)&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; AWT Technical Training (March 2026)&amp;nbsp; Scaling UP! H2O Academy&amp;nbsp;video courses&amp;nbsp; Submit a Show Idea&amp;nbsp; The Rising Tide Mastermind&amp;nbsp; Ep 422&amp;nbsp;Inside the Association of Water Technologies with John&amp;nbsp;Caloritis Hach&amp;nbsp;Water Analysis Handbook&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; Words of Water&amp;nbsp;with James McDonald Today's definition is the smallest functional unit of a cooling tower that contains its own heat exchange section, fan or air-moving system, water distribution system, and drift eliminators.&amp;nbsp;  &amp;nbsp; 2026&amp;nbsp;Events for Water Professionals&amp;nbsp; Check&amp;nbsp;out our Scaling UP! H2O Events Calendar where&amp;nbsp;we\u2019ve&amp;nbsp;listed every event Water Treaters should be aware of by clicking&amp;nbsp;HERE.&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;     ","author_name":"Scaling UP! H2O","author_url":"http:\/\/scalinguph2o.com","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/39932590\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/f78e2d\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/content\/198042265"}