Treatment Technologies

    Activated Carbon Filtration Companies

    GAC and PAC providers for taste & odor, organics, chlorine, and micro-pollutant removal in drinking water and industrial streams.

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    Liquid X logo

    Liquid X

    Verified
    United Arab Emirates1-50 employees
    Granular Activated Carbon (GAC) Filters · GO–Polymer Composites · Cartridge Filters
    mea

    Liquid X is a water technology consultancy and commercialization platform focused on accelerating the deployment of next-generation filtration solutions, with a core emphasis on graphene-based water treatment. Founded to address the gap between breakthrough innovation and real-world implementation, Liquid X operates at the intersection of advanced material science, water infrastructure, and market deployment. While significant advances in water technologies exist globally, many remain confined to laboratories or early-stage ventures. Liquid X bridges this gap by identifying, validating, and commercializing high-impact solutions—particularly graphene-based filtration systems—within the GCC and wider MENA region. Our consultancy model is built around a full lifecycle approach: from technology scouting and technical evaluation to pilot design, validation, and scaled deployment. We work with asset owners, governments, and enterprises to translate emerging technologies into practical, site-ready solutions. This includes designing pilot programs with measurable performance metrics, enabling data-driven decision-making, and ensuring that innovations are proven under real operating conditions before scale-up. A key focus of Liquid X is the commercialization of graphene-based water filters. Graphene, a two-dimensional material with exceptional strength, permeability, and adsorption capacity, has the potential to fundamentally transform water treatment. Its nano-scale structure allows precise separation of contaminants while enabling faster water flow and lower energy consumption compared to conventional systems. Through strategic partnerships with innovators, researchers, and manufacturers, Liquid X is actively working to bring graphene filtration technologies from concept to market. These systems are being developed to address some of the most critical water challenges, including the removal of PFAS and emerging contaminants, heavy metals, dissolved solids, and industrial pollutants—while significantly reducing waste and energy intensity associated with traditional technologies such as reverse osmosis. Our role extends beyond technology development. Liquid X supports the full commercialization journey, including: Technical due diligence and performance validation Pilot implementation and third-party verification Integration with existing infrastructure Development of scalable deployment models Coordination with EPC contractors, facility managers, and regulators Ongoing monitoring, compliance, and optimization By operating as a vendor-agnostic platform, we ensure that solutions are selected based on performance, suitability, and long-term value—not vendor bias. The MENA region faces some of the world’s most acute water challenges, including scarcity, high desalination dependence, and rising energy costs. Liquid X is positioned to introduce more efficient, decentralized, and sustainable alternatives through advanced filtration technologies. Graphene-based systems, in particular, offer the potential for lightweight, modular, and energy-efficient treatment solutions that can be deployed at scale across residential, commercial, and industrial applications. At its core, Liquid X is not just a consultancy—it is an enabler of the next generation of water infrastructure. By combining deep regional expertise with global innovation networks, we are helping transform how water is treated, distributed, and consumed. Our mission is to accelerate the transition from legacy, resource-intensive systems to smarter, more sustainable water solutions—unlocking the full potential of graphene and other advanced materials to build a more water-secure future.

    Activated Carbon Filtration
    Nanofiltration (NF) Systems
    Point-of-Use (POU) Filtration Systems
    +11 more
    food-beverages
    hospitality-tourism

    Sizing and Operating Activated Carbon Filtration for Trace Organic Removal

    Activated carbon filtration removes chlorine, taste-and-odor compounds (geosmin, 2-methylisoborneol), trihalomethanes, pesticides, and low-molecular-weight organics through physical adsorption on high-surface-area media at 800–1,200 m²/g iodine number. Granular activated carbon (GAC) beds are sized by empty bed contact time (EBCT) — 7.5–15 minutes for taste-and-odor, 10–20 minutes for THM precursor removal under USEPA Stage 2 D/DBP Rule, 15–30 minutes for atrazine, 1,4-dioxane, and longer-chain PFAS. Powdered activated carbon (PAC) at 5–25 mg/L provides operational flexibility for seasonal upsets.

    Bed life depends on competitive adsorption from natural organic matter, biological growth on the carbon surface, and target contaminant concentration. Municipal THM precursor removal typically yields 12–36 months between thermal reactivations at 800–900 °C; industrial dechlorination ahead of RO runs 24–60 months. Specify virgin coconut-shell GAC (high hardness, low ash, NSF/ANSI 61 for potable use) or bituminous-coal GAC (lower cost, higher capacity for larger organics). Demand AWWA B604 certification for potable applications and validated breakthrough curves on your actual feedwater.

    Operational pitfalls include bed channeling (mitigated by backwash at 15–20 m/h with 30–50% bed expansion), microbial colonization (managed by periodic chlorination then dechlorination upstream of RO), and pressure-drop creep signaling exhaustion. Spent carbon is reactivated thermally in rotary or multiple-hearth furnaces under EU BAT-AEL waste-gas limits. Aguato lists providers with proven GAC media supply, vessel fabrication, and on-site reactivation services for municipal drinking water, industrial dechlorination, and PFAS-removal duty.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What EBCT do I need for GAC to remove THMs and taste-and-odor compounds?

    Taste-and-odor compounds (geosmin, MIB) require 7.5–15 minutes EBCT. THM precursor removal under USEPA Stage 2 D/DBP Rule needs 10–20 minutes EBCT. Atrazine, perchlorate precursors, and 1,4-dioxane need 15–30 minutes. EBCT equals bed volume divided by flow rate. Higher EBCT means longer bed life and better breakthrough margin, but also more capital cost and footprint — always pilot on actual source water before locking design.

    How long does a GAC bed last before reactivation?

    Bed life depends on influent TOC, target contaminants, and EBCT. Municipal THM precursor removal at 2–5 mg/L TOC typically runs 12–36 months between reactivations. Industrial dechlorination ahead of RO at 1–3 mg/L free chlorine runs 24–60 months. PFAS removal is much shorter — 6–18 months — because PFAS competes poorly with natural organic matter for adsorption sites. Track effluent target contaminant and replace at breakthrough.

    What is the difference between GAC and PAC?

    GAC is a fixed-bed contactor running continuously and replaced or reactivated when exhausted. PAC is dosed at 5–25 mg/L upstream of a clarifier or filter and removed with sludge. PAC suits seasonal taste-and-odor events or emergency spill response where a permanent GAC contactor is not justified. GAC offers lower cost per kg of contaminant removed for continuous loads; PAC offers operational flexibility but higher per-event cost.

    Is GAC effective for removing PFAS from drinking water?

    GAC removes longer-chain PFAS (PFOS, PFOA) effectively but has limited capacity for shorter-chain compounds (PFBS, PFBA). GAC systems targeting PFAS require EBCT of 10 to 20 minutes and typically achieve 6 to 18 month bed life depending on competing TOC. For shorter-chain PFAS or very low target concentrations, single-use anion exchange resins or reverse osmosis are usually paired with or substituted for GAC. The DWI's current indicative value for PFAS in UK drinking water is guiding water companies to evaluate treatment options now ahead of future regulatory MCL setting.

    Case Study·Lowland river abstraction, drinking water treatment works, East Anglia, UK
    Challenge

    A treatment works serving 80,000 properties was failing to consistently achieve the WS(WQ)R 2016 taste and odour standards during summer cyanobacterial bloom events, with geosmin and 2-methylisoborneol (MIB) detectable at the consumer tap above the 10 ng/L guide value. The existing sand filters had no adsorption capability.

    Approach

    Granular activated carbon contactors were installed in series with the existing rapid gravity sand filters, providing an EBCT of 12 minutes using coconut-shell GAC certified to AWWA B604. Powdered activated carbon emergency dosing capability was retained as a contingency for extreme bloom events exceeding GAC bed capacity.

    Outcome

    Geosmin and MIB removal through the GAC contactors exceeded 90% in all monitored bloom events over the first 3 seasons of operation. Consumer taste and odour complaints related to earthy/musty flavour fell by 94% compared to the pre-GAC baseline. GAC bed life (measured by breakthrough of test compounds) exceeded 24 months before the first planned reactivation.

    Questions to Ask Shortlisted Providers

    1. 1

      What EBCT are you designing to for removal of our target compounds, and have you based this on pilot column testing with our actual feedwater rather than generic design curves?

      EBCT requirements are feedwater-specific because NOM competes for adsorption sites; generic design curves can underestimate required EBCT by 30 to 50% on high-NOM source waters.

    2. 2

      What GAC media specification are you proposing (coconut shell vs. coal-based, iodine number, effective size), and is it certified to AWWA B604 and NSF/ANSI 61?

      Media specification determines adsorption capacity and durability; NSF/ANSI 61 certification is mandatory for potable applications and must cover the specific product proposed.

    3. 3

      How do you monitor GAC bed life and breakthrough, and at what point do you recommend reactivation or replacement?

      GAC beds exhaust gradually; continuous monitoring of target compound breakthrough is the only reliable way to prevent non-compliant water reaching distribution.

    4. 4

      What is the reactivation or carbon replacement logistics arrangement, and who bears the cost and liability if reactivation quality is insufficient to restore bed performance?

      Thermal reactivation must achieve sufficient surface area restoration to meet original performance; reactivated carbon that underperforms compared to virgin carbon creates unquantified performance risk.

    5. 5

      Does your carbon system require downstream chlorination adjustment, and have you assessed the risk of biological growth within the GAC bed producing unwanted byproducts?

      GAC contactors can support biological activity that modifies water chemistry before chlorination; the interaction between the biologically active carbon and downstream disinfection must be assessed in the design.

    What Drives Cost in This Category

    EBCT and contactor volume

    Higher EBCT requires larger contactor vessels and more media, directly increasing capital cost; EBCT is the primary design variable linking performance targets to system size.

    Carbon media type and quality

    High-quality coconut-shell GAC costs 2 to 3 times more per tonne than coal-based media but has higher hardness, lower fines generation, and longer service life between reactivations.

    Reactivation frequency and logistics

    GAC reactivation at 800 to 900 degrees C costs GBP 400 to GBP 800 per tonne; reactivation frequency depends on EBCT, contaminant loading, and competing NOM, and is the dominant long-term operating cost variable.

    PAC emergency dosing infrastructure

    Retaining PAC dosing capability alongside GAC contactors adds capital cost for storage, dosing equipment, and upstream contact time, but provides essential operational flexibility during extreme taste-and-odour events.

    Key Regulations & Standards

    Water Supply (Water Quality) Regulations 2016

    Sets the parametric framework within which taste and odour compounds, THMs, and emerging contaminants (including indicative PFAS values) must be controlled in drinking water supplies in England.

    DWI Regulation 31

    GAC systems installed on public water supplies as a new treatment process require DWI prior approval, including demonstration of media safety and process performance.

    AWWA B604

    American Water Works Association standard for granular activated carbon specifying minimum iodine number, apparent density, moisture, and hardness for water treatment applications.

    NSF/ANSI 61

    Certification standard for all materials in contact with drinking water, including GAC media, vessel linings, and associated pipework, ensuring materials do not leach contaminants above health-based thresholds.