UV Sterilizer Sizing for Industrial Water Treatment
ANLISI Engineering · April 2026 · 6 min read
UV sterilizers are sized by UV dose — the amount of UV energy delivered to the water, in mJ/cm². Get the dose right and you can achieve 4-log (99.99%) reduction of bacteria; get the flow rate or water quality wrong and the same lamp assembly delivers half the dose it’s rated for.
UV Dose Requirements
| Target Organism | Required Dose (mJ/cm²) | Log Reduction |
|---|---|---|
| E. coli, coliforms (general) | 6–10 | 4-log |
| Standard bacteria (NSF/ANSI 55 Class A) | 40 | 4-log validated |
| Cryptosporidium | 10 | 3-log |
| Giardia | 10 | 3-log |
| Adenovirus | 186 | 4-log (very high — UV alone not practical) |
For most industrial and commercial applications — process water, food & beverage, cooling tower makeup — the 40 mJ/cm² dose is the design target. It meets NSF/ANSI 55 Class A validation and provides a comfortable margin over minimum inactivation requirements.
The Variable Nobody Talks About Enough: UVT
UV transmittance (UVT) is the percentage of 254 nm UV light that passes through 10 mm of your water. It directly controls how far UV light penetrates the flow chamber — and therefore what dose water actually receives at the far wall.
| UVT (%) | Water Description | Impact on Sizing |
|---|---|---|
| 95–98% | RO permeate, high-purity DI water | Minimal — lamp can be sized to bare minimum |
| 85–95% | Municipal tap, softened water | Standard — most lamp ratings assume 95% UVT |
| 70–85% | Surface water, moderate organic load | Derate lamp by 15–30%; increase wattage or reduce flow |
| <70% | Iron-bearing water, high TOC | UV impractical without upstream pretreatment |
Most UV lamp wattage ratings assume 95% UVT at end-of-lamp-life (EOL). If you’re sizing for well water at 80% UVT, the actual delivered dose at EOL can drop to 50% of the rated dose. Either test your UVT or add a safety factor of 1.5–2× on lamp wattage.
Sizing: Wattage vs. Flow Rate
UV manufacturers publish validated dose tables. As a rough guide for 40 mJ/cm² at 95% UVT, the relationship is approximately:
Max flow (m³/h) ≈ lamp power (W) × 0.05 [for single-lamp, 95% UVT]
Example: a 55 W lamp handles roughly 2.5–3 m³/h at 95% UVT. For 10 m³/h, you need either multiple lamps in parallel or a multi-lamp chamber (4–6 lamps in a single vessel).
For flows above 5 m³/h, multi-lamp chambers are more cost-effective than multiple single-lamp units. They also simplify piping and monitoring — one controller, one flow switch, one set of alarms.
Stainless Steel vs. PVC Chambers
| 304/316L Stainless Steel | PVC | |
|---|---|---|
| Max temperature | 60–80°C | 40°C |
| Pressure rating | 6–10 bar typical | 2–4 bar |
| Reflectivity | High — extends effective dose | Low |
| Application | Food, pharma, high-flow industrial | Residential, low-pressure light-duty |
| Cost | Higher | Lower |
For industrial water treatment, 316L SS chambers are the default when the water contains any chloride. PVC is acceptable for residential or very light-duty commercial applications with clean, low-pressure water.
Monitoring and Maintenance
Every industrial UV unit should have a UV intensity sensor and an alarm output. The sensor monitors actual UV output at the reactor wall — when output drops below the minimum dose threshold, the alarm triggers before the system fails silently.
Lamp replacement is typically at 9,000–12,000 hours (about 12–15 months of continuous operation), regardless of whether the lamp still lights up. UV output degrades throughout lamp life; a lamp that looks lit at 12,000 hours may be delivering only 60% of its initial dose.
Schedule lamp replacement annually. Mark the lamp with the installation date using a permanent marker. Don’t wait for the lamp to fail — by then it’s been under-dosing for weeks or months.
Quartz sleeve cleaning: the quartz sleeve surrounding the lamp transmits UV light into the water. Iron deposits, calcium carbonate scale, and biofilm all block UV transmission. Clean with dilute citric acid (5–10%) every 3–6 months on hard or iron-bearing water; annually on clean RO permeate.
Combining UV with Residual Disinfection
UV provides no residual protection in the distribution system downstream — inactivated organisms can’t grow, but the water has no ongoing disinfectant. For systems where water sits in storage tanks or travels through long pipe runs before use, UV is combined with a low-level chlorine dose (0.2–0.5 mg/L free chlorine). The UV handles the bulk inactivation load; the chlorine maintains residual.
Tell us your flow rate, source water type (municipal/well/RO permeate), and whether UVT has been measured. We’ll specify a validated UV unit with monitoring output and a maintenance schedule.
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