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Back to the Basics, Part 3
Water Quality Products
July 2002
Jeff Roseman, CWS-1, Aqua Ion Plus+ Technologies
In this last section of a three-part series, the use of
ozone, ionization, distillation and aeration is discussed in a simple fashion
to help the beginner rationalize the importance for a full understanding of
these technologies and the need, again, for a professional water treatment
specialist.
PDF Version
Practical Engineering Combined with Sound Operations Optimizes Phosphorus Removal
Water Engineering & Management
April 2002
Daniel Bolduc and James Fitch, P.E.
Built in the early 1970s, The Oakland, Maine, Wastewater Treatment Facility (WWTF) treats and discharges approximately 300,000 gallons per day (gpd) of wastewater to the Messalonskee Stream. The facility was designed as a conventional activated sludge secondary treatment system to be used principally for BOD and TSS removals. The secondary effluent enters the Messalonskee Stream upstream of several impoundments. This practice has resulted in a steady decline in the water quality of the stream as evidenced by increased algae blooms and other signs of euthophication in impoundments located downstream of the discharge.
PDF Version
Aeration Performance of Weirs - Part 2
Water Engineering & Management
April 2001
Dr. Ahmet Baylar and Tamer Bagatur
The results of experiments of four types of weirs showed that drop height is the most important factor influencing oxygen transfer efficiency.
Aeration Performance of Weirs - Part 1
Water Engineering & Management
March 2001
Dr. Ahmet Baylar and Tamer Bagatur
Oxygen is vital to the life cycle common to water. It is essential to keep organisms living, to sustain species reproduction and for the development of populations. Oxygen is soluble in water in direct proportion to the partial pressure in the gas phase, while solubility decreases as temperature increases. Salt water holds less oxygen than fresh water. Oxygen enters the water by absorption directly from the atmosphere or by plant photosynthesis. It is removed by respiration of organisms and by organic decomposition. During respiration and decomposition, animals and plants consume dissolved oxygen and liberate carbon dioxide.
Aerators Stop Odors in Chicago
Water Engineering & Management
January 2000
Chicago and its surrounding 51 communities cover an area of 375 square miles and have a population of over 3,000,000 people. This metropolis is served by a combined sewer network carrying both raw sewage and stormwater in a single pipe.
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