Introduction
The jar test is the most important tool in a water treatment plant operator’s arsenal — yet it is frequently performed incorrectly, leading to over-dosing, under-dosing, and wasted chemicals. A properly conducted jar test can reduce chemical consumption by 20-40% while improving treated water quality. This guide provides a complete, step-by-step procedure with interpretation guidance and common mistakes to avoid.
Equipment Required
| Equipment | Specification | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Jar test apparatus | 6-place, variable speed (0-300 rpm), illuminated base preferred | Simultaneous testing of 6 dose levels under identical mixing conditions |
| Beakers | 1000mL or 2000mL, Griffin (low-form), identical shape and size | Sample containers — must be identical for valid comparison |
| Graduated cylinders | 10mL, 50mL, 100mL, 1000mL | Measuring samples and stock solutions |
| Pipettes / micropipettes | 1-5mL and 0.1-1.0mL | Precise dosing of stock solutions |
| Turbidimeter | NTU, 0-1000 range | Supernatant clarity measurement |
| pH meter | Calibrated, ±0.1 pH | Pre- and post-treatment pH |
| Timer/stopwatch | — | Mixing and settling time |
| Thermometer | 0-100°C | Sample temperature (affects coagulation kinetics) |
Stock Solution Preparation
PAC Stock Solution (1% = 10,000 mg/L)
- Weigh 10.0g PAC powder (spray dried or drum dried)
- Add to ~800mL distilled water in a 1000mL volumetric flask or beaker
- Stir at 200-300 rpm for 10-15 minutes until fully dissolved. Spray dried PAC dissolves in 3-8 min; drum dried may take 15-30 min
- Make up to 1000mL with distilled water. Mix well
- Use within 1 week. Store in a closed container, away from direct sunlight
Dosing calculation: 1mL of 1% PAC solution added to 1000mL sample = 10 mg/L PAC dose
PAM Stock Solution (0.1% = 1,000 mg/L)
- Weigh 1.0g PAM powder
- Add to ~800mL distilled water while stirring at 200-300 rpm. Critical: Sprinkle PAM slowly into the vortex. Dumping powder in creates undissolved “fisheye” gel particles
- Stir at 200-300 rpm for 60 minutes minimum (90 minutes if water temperature <15°C)
- Make up to 1000mL. Mix gently — avoid high shear
- Use within 24 hours. PAM solution degrades over time
Dosing calculation: 1mL of 0.1% PAM solution added to 1000mL sample = 1 mg/L PAM dose
Jar Test Procedure
Phase 1: Preparation
- Collect representative sample: 10-15L from the plant influent, after screening and equalization. Avoid sampling immediately after a process change or during CIP. Record time, date, source, and any visual observations (color, odor, turbidity)
- Measure initial parameters: pH, temperature, turbidity, COD (if relevant). Record all values on the jar test data sheet
- Warm/cool sample to process temperature: The jar test should be conducted at the same temperature as the full-scale plant. If plant water is 35°C but you test at 22°C, results will not translate
- Fill 6 beakers: Exactly 1000mL each. Use a graduated cylinder for accuracy — beaker markings are often inaccurate
- Label beakers: 1 through 6, with planned doses
Phase 2: PAC Dosing and Rapid Mix
- Set stirrers to 200 rpm (rapid mix — G value ~300-600 s-1 for 1000mL beaker)
- Dose PAC simultaneously into all 6 beakers: Use pipettes pre-loaded with the calculated volume. Suggested PAC doses (mg/L): Blank (0), 50, 100, 200, 300, 500. Adjust range based on prior experience — if your plant typically uses 200 mg/L, test 100, 150, 200, 250, 300, 400
- Rapid mix for 1 minute (or 2 minutes for high-turbidity water). Goal: uniform, instantaneous coagulant distribution
Phase 3: PAM Dosing and Slow Mix
- Reduce speed to 40-60 rpm (slow mix / flocculation — G value ~20-60 s-1)
- Dose PAM: Suggested doses: 1, 2, 3, 5 mg/L on beakers 2-5 (skip blank). Or if optimizing both PAC and PAM simultaneously, use a matrix design
- Slow mix for 10-15 minutes. Observe floc formation: initial pin flocs should appear within 30-60 seconds, growing to 2-5mm by 5-10 minutes. If no flocs form by 3 minutes, the PAC dose is likely too low
Phase 4: Settling
- Stop stirrers, start timer. Observe for 15-30 minutes
- Record settling velocity: Measure floc blanket descent every 2 minutes (or more frequently in first 5 minutes)
- Note floc characteristics: Size (1-2mm = fine, 2-5mm = good, >5mm = excellent but may trap water), shape (spherical vs irregular), settling pattern (blanket vs individual flocs)
Phase 5: Supernatant Analysis
- Sample from mid-depth: Use pipette or syringe, withdraw gently from ~5cm below the water surface. Do NOT decant — this disturbs settled flocs
- Measure turbidity of each supernatant. Record NTU
- Measure pH of each supernatant. Record alongside initial pH
- Optionally measure COD, color, UV254 depending on treatment goals
Phase 6: Data Analysis and Dose Selection
- Plot turbidity (y-axis) vs PAC dose (x-axis): The curve typically shows rapid improvement, then a plateau or minimum, then possible increase at overdose (re-stabilization)
- Select the dose at the “knee” of the curve: The lowest dose that achieves target turbidity. Not the lowest turbidity — the marginal improvement from 1.5 NTU to 1.0 NTU may require double the PAC dose
- Check pH: If pH at optimal turbidity dose is outside the desired range, adjust raw water pH and re-run the jar test
- Verify with a confirmation jar test: Run triplicates at the selected dose to confirm reproducibility
Interpreting Jar Test Results
| Observation | Interpretation | Action |
|---|---|---|
| No flocs at any dose | pH out of range for coagulation; interfering substance (chelating agent, surfactant); or PAC is degraded/hydrolyzed | Check pH; test raw water for complexing agents; try fresh PAC sample |
| Pin flocs only (<1mm) | PAC dose too low or insufficient PAM for bridging | Increase PAC dose; add or increase PAM dose |
| Large, fluffy, slow-settling flocs | PAM overdose — water trapped in floc structure | Reduce PAM dose. Large flocs that don’t settle are worse than medium flocs that settle fast |
| Cloudy/milky supernatant with no settleable flocs | PAC overdose — re-stabilization (particles re-charged positive, repel each other) | Reduce PAC dose. Re-stabilization is the clearest sign of overdose |
| Clear supernatant, fine surface scum | Oil/grease or floating solids not captured by flocs | Consider DAF instead of sedimentation. Increase PAM dose slightly |
| Good clarity but high residual Al (>0.2 mg/L) | Soluble Al species not precipitated; pH may be too low | Increase pH to 6.5-7.5; consider higher basicity PAC |
Common Jar Test Mistakes
- Using old or improperly prepared PAC/PAM solutions: Stale PAM solution loses 20-50% effectiveness. Always use fresh solutions
- Testing at the wrong temperature: Cold water (<10°C) requires 20-40% higher PAC dose. If your jar test is at 22°C lab temp but plant water is 5°C, you will under-dose in the plant
- Not mixing identically across beakers: Beaker shape, paddle position, and fill volume must be identical. A 10mm difference in paddle immersion changes mixing intensity ~25%
- Testing on the wrong sample: Raw influent that has sat for hours has different characteristics than fresh, flowing influent. Sample just before testing
- Choosing the clearest supernatant instead of the best value dose: The lowest turbidity dose may be 3x the cost of a slightly higher turbidity dose that still meets targets
- Not running a blank (no chemical) control: You need to know how much settling occurs naturally. A 40% turbidity reduction without chemicals is not unusual for high-solids wastewater
HydroChemix provides free jar test protocol templates and technical support for chemical dosing optimization. Contact jingshuicc@gmail.com for a downloadable jar test data sheet and dosing recommendation for your specific wastewater.