Environmental Engineering
Environmental Engineering
Environmental Engineering
§
The goal of the course is to provide students with the scientific principles, concepts,
and methodologies required to understand the interrelationships of the natural
world, to identify and analyze environmental problems both natural and human-
made, to evaluate the relative risks associated with these problems, and to examine
alternative solutions for resolving and/or preventing them.
Health impact:
Due to microbiological pollution
Due to microchemical pollution
The human environment encompasses all physical, chemical, biological and
social processes and influences, which individually or in combination exert
directly or indirectly a significant influence on the health and well-being of
human race.
Health: Health is not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, but a state of physical,
mental, and social well-being. (WH")
In developing countries:
Microbiological pollution is of more significance.
Environmental factors serve as links in the chain of transmission of diseases
Communicable disease like cholera, typhoid, dysentery, malaria, bilharziasis,
etc.
In industrialized countries:
microphysicochemical pollution is of more significance.
microchemical health hazards more complex than communicable diseases
cancer, leukemia, cardiovascular disorders, etc
Environmental Engineering is manifest by sound engineering
thought and practice in the solution of problems of
environmental sanitation, notably in the provision of safe,
palatable, and ample public water supplies, the proper
disposal of or recycle of waste water and solid wastes; the
adequate drainage of urban and rural areas for proper
sanitation; and the control of water, soil, and atmospheric
pollution, and the social and environmental impact of
public health, such as control of anthropod-borne diseases,
the elimination of industrial health hazards, and the
provision of adequate sanitation in urban, rural, and
recreational areas, and the effect of technological advances
on the environment. (ASCE)
More population - more food - more water - more of
everything - more industrial goods - more wastes -
more pollution!
World population:
1900 - 1.6 billion
1950 - 2.5 billion
1980 - 5.0 billion
2000 - 6.0 billion
2110 - 10.5 billion (estimated)
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- controlled toxic substances and hazardous and
nuclear wastes by way of regulating, restricting or
prohibiting the importation, manufacture, processing,
sale, distribution, use and disposal of chemical
substances and mixtures that present unreasonable
risk and/or injury to health or the environment.
It also prohibited the entry, even in transit, of
hazardous and nuclear wastes and their disposal into
the country.
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This Act maximized the utilization of valuable
resources and encouraged resource conservation and
recovery.
It promoted solid waste avoidance and volume
reduction.
RA 9003 places the primary enforcement and
responsibility of solid waste management with LGUs
and encouraged cooperation and self-regulation
among waste generators.
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A single family residence uses about 400 Lcpd (liters per
capita per day).
Problem 2. If a faucet is dripping at a rate of one drop per second and each drop
contains 0.150 milliliters, calculate how much water (in liters) will be lost in
one year.
Solution:
(0.150 mL/s)(86,400 s/d)(365 d/y)(1 x 10-3 L/mL) = 4,730 L/y
Mass balance equation:
Input = "utput 1 + output 2 + output 3 + output 4 + accumulation
"ne half of food is for biological maintenance = output 1 = (o.5)(25 Kg) = 12.5 Kg
"ne half of food is lost to sewer system = output 2 = (0.5)(25 kg) = 12.5 kg
The recycled amount is 25 percent of what remains of input after food and
accumulation is removed = "utput 3 = 0.25( input Ȃoutput 1 Ȃ output 2 Ȃ
accumulation) = 0.25(50 Ȃ 12.5 -12.5 Ȃ 1) = 6 kg
· is the precipitation that is intercepted by plant foliage and eventually
evaporates back to the atmosphere rather than falling to the ground.
· includes the variety of ways by which water moves across the land. This includes both
surface runoff and channel runoff. As it flows, the water may infiltrate into the ground,
evaporate into the air, become stored in lakes or reservoirs, or be extracted for agricultural or
other human uses.
·
is the flow of water from the ground surface into the ground. Once infiltrated, the
water becomes soil moisture or groundwater.
·
is the flow of water underground, in the vadose zone and aquifers. Subsurface
water may return to the surface (eg. as a spring or by being pumped) or eventually seep into the
oceans. Water returns to the land surface at lower elevation than where it infiltrated, under the
force of gravity or gravity induced pressures. Groundwater tends to move slowly, and is
replenished slowly, so it can remain in aquifers for thousands of years.
· is the transformation of water from liquid to gas phases as it moves from the
ground or bodies of water into the overlying atmosphere. The source of energy for evaporation is
primarily solar radiation. Evaporation often implicitly includes transpiration from plants, though
together they are specifically referred to as evapotranspiration. Approximately 90% of
atmospheric water comes from evaporation, while the remaining 10% is from transpiration.
Total annual evapotranspiration amounts to approximately 505,000 km³ of water, 434,000 km³ of
which evaporates from the oceans.
is the state change directly from solid water (snow or ice) to water vapor.
is the movement of water ² in solid, liquid, or vapour states ² through the
atmosphere. Without advection, water that evaporated over the oceans could not precipitate over
land.
is the transformation of water vapour to liquid water droplets in the air, producing
clouds and fog.
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ëoss of water from a plant, mainly through the stomata of leaves. Darkness,
internal water deficit, and extremes of temperature tend to close stomata and
decrease transpiration; illumination, ample water supply, and optimum
temperature cause stomata to open and increase transpiration. Its exact
significance is disputed; its roles in providing the energy to transport water in the
plant and in aiding dissipation of the sun's heat (by cooling through evaporation of
water) have been challenged. Since stomatal openings are necessary for the
exchange of gases, transpiration has been considered by some to be merely an
unavoidable phenomenon that accompanies the real functions of the stomata.
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(ET) is a term used to describe the sum of evaporation and plant transpiration
from the earth's land surface to atmosphere. Evaporation accounts for the
movement of water to the air from sources such as the soil, canopy interception,
and water bodies. Transpiration accounts for the movement of water within a plant
and the subsequent loss of water as vapour through stomata in its leaves.
Evapotranspiration is an important part of the water cycle.
·
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In hydrology, a rock layer or sequence that contains water and releases it in
appreciable amounts. The rocks contain water-filled pores that, when
connected, allow water to flow through their matrix. A confined aquifer is
overlain by a rock layer that does not transmit water in any appreciable
amount or that is impermeable. There probably are few truly confined
aquifers. In an unconfined aquifer the upper surface (water table) is open to
the atmosphere through permeable overlying material. An aquifer also may be
called a water-bearing stratum, lens, or zone.
In the c ntext f the ater cycle, a reserv ir represents the ater c ntaine in ifferent
steps ithin the cycle. The largest reserv ir is the c llecti n f ceans, acc nting f r
97% f the Earth's ater. The next largest q antity (2%) is st re in s li f rm in the
ice caps an glaciers. The ater c ntaine ithin all living rganisms represents the
smallest reserv ir.
The v l mes f ater in the fresh ater reserv irs, partic larly th se that are available
f r h man se, are imp rtant ater res rces.
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Oceans 1370 97.25
Ice caps & glaciers 29 2.05
r n ater 9.5 0.6
ëakes 0.125 0.01
S il m ist re 0.065 0.005
Atm sphere 0.013 0.001
Streams & rivers 0.0017 0.0001
Bi sphere 0.0006 0.00004
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The total quantity of water available to the earth is finite, the global hydrologic system is
considered to be a closed system: that is self-contained or in mass balance.
0 1 0 1 0 1 2 0 1 0 1 9 0 3 *
Where:
V = volume
P = precipitation
S = storage
R = runoff
G = groundwater infiltration
E = evaporation
T = transpiration
ȡ = density
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Where:
f = infiltration rate, mm/h
fC = equilibrium or final infiltration rate, mm/h
fO = initial infiltration rate, mm/h
k = empirical constant, h-1
t = time, h
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The amount and type of treatment applied by a PWS varies with the source
type and quality. Many ground water systems can satisfy local as well as
national government requirements without applying any treatment, while
others need to add chlorine or additional treatment. Because surface water
systems are exposed to direct wet weather runoff and to the atmosphere
and are therefore more easily contaminated, regulations require that these
systems treat their water.