Activated Carbon Filter Selection: GAC, Carbon Block, and Catalytic Carbon

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Activated Carbon Filter Selection: GAC, Carbon Block, and Catalytic Carbon

ANLISI Engineering · April 2026 · 7 min read

Engineering GuideGAC · Catalytic Carbon · EBCT Sizing
2–3 minEBCT for dechlorination
10–15 minEBCT for TOC reduction
2–3 yrtypical GAC service life
1,000+iodine number — coconut GAC

Activated carbon filters get specified for three different jobs: chlorine/chloramine removal, taste and odor control, and TOC or organic compound reduction. The media type, vessel sizing, and replacement interval differ significantly for each — which is why “an activated carbon filter” is only the start of the conversation.

Three Media Types, Three Different Jobs

Media TypeBest ForNot Suitable ForBackwashable?
GAC (granular)High-flow dechlorination, RO pretreatment, rough organicsFine sediment, tight organics at short contact timeYes
Carbon block cartridgePoint-of-use drinking water, combined sediment + carbonIndustrial flows above 2–3 m³/hNo — replace
Catalytic GACChloramine destruction, H₂S removalDoesn’t outperform standard GAC on free chlorineYes

Standard GAC barely touches chloramine (combined chlorine). If your municipal supply uses chloramine — increasingly common as utilities move away from free chlorine to reduce disinfection byproducts — you need catalytic carbon. The media looks identical to standard GAC; always check the spec sheet.

The One Number That Governs Sizing: EBCT

EBCT (Empty Bed Contact Time) is media volume divided by volumetric flow rate:

EBCT (min) = media volume (L) / flow rate (L/min)
ApplicationMinimum EBCTNotes
Free chlorine removal2–3 minVery fast kinetics — dechlorination is practically instantaneous on fresh GAC
Chloramine removal8–10 minRequires catalytic carbon; standard GAC at 10 min still removes ≤40% chloramine
Taste & odor polishing5–7 minFresh GAC handles most taste/odor at 5 min
TOC reduction10–15 minDepends heavily on molecular weight of organics; test first
Pesticide / THM reduction12–20 minPeriodic outlet testing mandatory — breakthrough is not always detectable by taste
Sizing Example

Flow: 20 m³/h (333 L/min). Duty: dechlorination ahead of RO (EBCT = 3 min).
Media volume = 333 × 3 = ~1,000 L. Specify a Ø1,000 mm vessel with 1,300 mm bed depth (1.0 m³ usable).

Media Specification — What the Numbers Mean

The key spec for organics adsorption is the iodine number: mg iodine adsorbed per gram of carbon, tested at a defined concentration. Higher = more micropore surface area = better for small organic molecules.

Carbon SourceIodine NumberTypical UseCost
Coal-based GAC850–950 mg/gIndustrial dechlorination, wastewaterLower
Coconut shell GAC1,000–1,200 mg/gPotable water, food-grade, RO pretreatment+30–50%
Wood-based GAC700–900 mg/gColor removal, large organic moleculesVaries

For drinking water and RO pretreatment on potable supplies, we specify coconut-shell GAC. The adsorption performance difference matters at long EBCT conditions. For straight dechlorination on industrial process water, coal-based GAC at lower cost works fine.

Mesh size affects pressure drop. Standard 8×30 mesh (0.6–2.4 mm) is the default for large vessels. Finer 12×40 mesh improves kinetics marginally but increases head loss — rarely worth it for industrial units.

Vessel Material

For chlorinated water with chloride < 200 mg/L: 304 SS or FRP both work. Above 200 mg/L Cl⁻ (brackish, coastal groundwater), use 316L SS. For NSF 61-certified potable water systems, specify food-grade FRP liner or electropolished 304 SS interior.

Knowing When It’s Time to Replace

GAC doesn’t have a fixed calendar life — it depends on load. Backwashing removes accumulated suspended solids (which blind the bed and raise pressure drop) but does not restore adsorption capacity. Once the surface sites are saturated, the carbon needs replacing.

DutyTypical Media LifeReplacement Trigger
Dechlorination (municipal)2–3 yearsChlorine measurable at outlet (>0.05 mg/L)
Heavy TOC load6–12 monthsRising outlet TOC or taste/odor return
Catalytic (chloramine)2–4 yearsChloramine breakthrough at outlet

Test outlet chlorine quarterly on dechlorination systems. An RO membrane set costs 5–10× more than a GAC media change — catching breakthrough early is always cheaper.

Tell us your flow rate, source water chlorine level, and whether your supply is chlorinated or chloraminated — we’ll specify the right media, vessel, and EBCT within 24 hours.

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