Introduction
The price per ton of coagulant is misleading. A $200/ton coagulant at 500 mg/L dose costs more per cubic meter treated than a $350/ton coagulant at 100 mg/L. Beyond dosage, pH adjustment chemicals, sludge disposal, and operational labor all affect the total cost of ownership (TCO). This guide provides a structured TCO comparison framework for PAC, alum, and ferric chloride — the three most widely used coagulants.
Coagulant Price and Dose Comparison
| Parameter | PAC 30% (Spray Dried, High Basicity) | Aluminum Sulfate (Alum, 17% Al2O3) | Ferric Chloride (FeCl3, 40% Solution) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical unit price (USD/ton, FOB China) | $280-380 | $180-250 (solid), $80-120 (liquid 48%) | $300-450 (liquid 40%), $500-700 (solid) |
| Typical dosage (mg/L, general wastewater) | 100-300 | 150-500 (1.5-3x PAC dose) | 80-300 |
| Chemical cost per 1000 m3 treated (at mid-range dose) | $56-76 (200 mg/L at $300/ton) | $54-113 (300 mg/L at $220/ton) | $90-216 (150 mg/L at $450/ton for 40% liquid) |
| Effective pH range | 5.0-8.5 | 5.5-7.5 (narrower) | 4.0-11.0 (widest) |
| Alkalinity consumption (mg/L as CaCO3 per mg/L coagulant) | 0.25-0.5 (low — pre-hydrolyzed) | 0.5-1.0 (high) | 0.75-1.0 (high — consumes alkalinity, lowers pH sharply) |
| pH adjustment chemical needed? | Rarely (only for very low alkalinity water) | Often — needs lime or soda ash for pH correction | Often — low pH requires NaOH or lime for pH correction |
TCO Analysis Framework — 5 Cost Components
1. Coagulant Chemical Cost
Formula: Cost per m3 = (Dosage mg/L x Price per ton) / 1,000,000
Example: PAC 200 mg/L at $300/ton = (200 x 300) / 1,000,000 = $0.06/m3
2. pH Adjustment Chemical Cost
Alum: Each 100 mg/L alum consumes ~50 mg/L alkalinity as CaCO3, which may drop pH by 0.5-1.0 units. Lime (Ca(OH)2) at ~$150/ton, dosed at ~50 mg/L to compensate: cost = (50 x 150) / 1,000,000 = $0.0075/m3
PAC (high basicity): Minimal to no pH adjustment needed for most waters. Cost = $0 to $0.002/m3
Ferric chloride: Similar to alum. Significant pH depression. Lime dose 50-100 mg/L: cost = $0.0075-0.015/m3
3. Sludge Handling and Disposal Cost
This is the most overlooked cost component. Sludge disposal costs typically $20-80 per wet ton (transport + landfill tipping fee).
| Coagulant | Sludge Produced (kg dry solids / kg coagulant) | Estimated Sludge Volume (wet, 2% solids) per 1000 m3 Treated | Sludge Disposal Cost per 1000 m3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| PAC (200 mg/L) | 0.3-0.5 (low) | 3-5 m3 (3-5 tons wet) | $0.06-0.20/m3 (at $40/ton wet) |
| Alum (300 mg/L) | 0.5-1.0 (higher) | 7.5-15 m3 (7.5-15 tons wet) | $0.30-0.60/m3 |
| Ferric chloride (150 mg/L) | 0.6-1.2 (highest) | 4.5-9 m3 (4.5-9 tons wet) | $0.18-0.36/m3 |
Key difference: The savings in sludge disposal when using PAC vs alum ($0.24-0.40/m3) can exceed the chemical cost difference ($0.02-0.04/m3). Sludge is the hidden cost driver.
4. Operational Labor and Maintenance
| Factor | PAC | Alum | FeCl3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Solution preparation frequency | Daily to weekly (fast dissolving) | Daily to weekly | Pumped directly (liquid). No preparation |
| Dosing pump maintenance | Low (clean solution) | Moderate (some residue) | High (corrosive — pump seals, valves, piping degrade faster) |
| Storage tank corrosion | Low (HDPE or FRP standard) | Low | High — requires HDPE, FRP, or rubber-lined steel. Carbon steel corrodes rapidly |
| Operator adjustment frequency | Low (wide pH range = stable performance) | Moderate (pH-sensitive, needs more adjustment for raw water changes) | Moderate |
| Estimated labor + maintenance cost per 1000 m3 | $0.01-0.03 | $0.02-0.04 | $0.03-0.08 (higher maintenance from corrosion) |
5. Performance and Compliance Risk Cost
Hard to quantify but real: the cost of non-compliance (fines, production stops, reputational damage) when a coagulant fails.
- PAC: Most forgiving. Wide pH range, works in cold water, consistent performance. Lowest compliance risk
- Alum: Sensitive to pH and temperature. Cold water (<5°C) performance degrades significantly. Moderate compliance risk in winter or in variable raw water quality
- FeCl3: Effective but corrosive and stains everything (brown iron stains). Overdose turns treated water yellow. Residual iron in effluent can cause compliance issues. Moderate-high risk
Complete TCO Comparison — Worked Example
Scenario: Industrial wastewater treatment plant, 2,000 m3/day, neutral pH, moderate alkalinity (100 mg/L as CaCO3), 25°C.
| Cost Component ($/day) | PAC (200 mg/L) | Alum (350 mg/L) | FeCl3 (150 mg/L, 40% liquid) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Coagulant cost | $120 (400 kg/day x $300/ton) | $154 (700 kg/day x $220/ton) | $180 (750 kg liquid/day x $240/ton liquid equivalent) |
| 2. pH adjustment (lime) | $0 (no adjustment needed) | $15 (100 kg/day x $150/ton) | $20 (133 kg/day x $150/ton) |
| 3. Sludge disposal | $160 (4 wet tons x $40/ton) | $440 (11 wet tons x $40/ton) | $280 (7 wet tons x $40/ton) |
| 4. Labor + maintenance | $40 | $60 | $120 (corrosion maintenance) |
| TOTAL per day | $320 | $669 | $600 |
| Cost per m3 | $0.16 | $0.33 | $0.30 |
| Annual cost (350 operating days) | $112,000 | $234,150 | $210,000 |
PAC saves $98,000-122,000/year vs alternatives — despite having the highest unit price per ton. The savings come from lower dosage, no pH chemicals, and dramatically less sludge.
When Alum or FeCl3 May Be the Right Choice
- Alum: When local alum supply is extremely cheap and sludge disposal is free/near-free (e.g., land application on site). Also when you have sunk infrastructure investment in an alum system that works
- FeCl3: When treating very low pH wastewater (pH 2-4) — FeCl3 works at lower pH than PAC or alum. When phosphorus removal is the primary goal (FeCl3 is more effective than Al-based coagulants for P removal). When treating sulfide-containing wastewater (FeCl3 precipitates sulfide as FeS)
- PAC: The default choice for almost all other applications. Lower TCO in >80% of scenarios
How to Run Your Own TCO Analysis
- Get jar-test-optimized doses for each coagulant on your actual wastewater — not generic estimates. The specific dose makes or breaks the analysis
- Measure actual sludge production at each optimized dose. Weigh filter cake, measure % solids. Don’t estimate — sludge is the biggest cost variable
- Get real price quotes from multiple suppliers. Include shipping/delivery to your plant
- Include pH adjustment costs if your alkalinity is low. Test with and without pH adjustment chemicals
- Calculate in $/m3, not $/ton. This is the only metric that matters
HydroChemix provides PAC with consistent quality and competitive pricing that delivers lowest TCO in controlled jar test comparisons. Contact jingshuicc@gmail.com for a free PAC sample and jar test protocol to run your own TCO comparison vs your current coagulant.