ApC2Kp, while I guess all of us should try to envision the future and change as much as we can in our work and home lives (and this is even kind of fun to do!), I‘m not sure at least related to the materials discussed of the specific examples of chloramination you’ve chosen. While there is indeed likely increasing use of chloramines over other chlorine forms for various reasons, actually it is not really new technology. In this regard, you may be interested in the EPA fact sheet at
As far as cement-lining and chloramines for disinfection, I believe one of the very earliest utilities to use chloramines was reportedly Boston, MA in 1932. I believe Boston also is a quite prolific contemporary user of cement mortar linings, and incidentally just a very few years ago chose that very technology to rehabilitate with minimal disruption and for even longer life substantial sections of some major, unlined iron mains that were at the time in excess of 100 years old. As far as concerns of chloramination, I have incidentally also noticed that there have apparently been some concerns of chloramination that may be sort of opposite what you expressed (see effects on at least some sort of epoxy linings for at least small plumbing materials at
). I do not know if that “epoxy-lined” pipe tested is anything like what Bris is looking at.
While some rubber and other polymeric items have indeed likely been affected by disinfection practices (examples are thin plumbing items with which we are all likely some familiar, or have even “put our hands on”), it has been reported e.g. in Bonds R.W. (2004), Effect of Chloramines on Ductile-Iron Pipe Gaskets of Various Elastomer Compounds, Journal AWWA, vol. 96, 4, 153-160 that the configuration and quality of standardized, modern pipe gaskets per ANSI/AWWA Standard C111/A21.11 used with at least ductile iron pipe in the USA are reportedly quite unlike those items.