Wastewater Treatment: Unit Processes of Secondary Treatment
Wastewater Treatment: Unit Processes of Secondary Treatment
Wastewater Treatment: Unit Processes of Secondary Treatment
Wastewater Treatment
Unit Processes of Secondary
Treatment
Prepared by:
Arjay L. Kuizon
BSCE3-E
ES323-Environmental Engineering
March 26, 2014
Introduction
Water is essential to sustain life on Earth and an understanding of water quantity and
quality issues is vital for anyone involved in environmental management. Fundamentals of
Hydrology provide an absorbing and comprehensive introduction to how fresh water moves
on and around the planet and how humans affect the quantity and quality of water available
to them. The book consists of three parts, each of fundamental importance to an
understanding of hydrology. Fundamentals of Hydrology are an accessible introduction to
the study of hydrology at university level. It presents the hydrological processes, techniques
used to assess water resources and an up-to-date overview of hydrological management.
Discussions
The Hydrological Cycle
As starring point for the study of hydrology it is useful to consider the hydrological
cycle. This is the conceptual model of how water moves around between the earth and
atmosphere in different state of matter. It is the supplying and removing water from the
earths surface. We have two process of transferring water from the earths atmosphere
which is evaporation and transpiration. Evaporation is a type of vaporization of a liquid
that occurs from the surface of a liquid into a gaseous phase that is not saturated with the
evaporating substance while transpiration is the process of water movement through a
plant and its evaporation from aerial parts, such as from leaves but also from stems and
flowers.
determined, but near the water table the average cycling time of water may be a year or less,
while in deep aquifers it may be as long as thousands of years.
Groundwater plays a vital role in the development of arid and semiarid zones,
sometimes supporting vast agricultural and industrial enterprises that could not otherwise
exist. It is particularly fortunate that aquifers antedating the formation of deserts remain
unaffected by increases in aridity with the passage of time. Withdrawal, however, will
deplete even the largest of groundwater basins so that development based on the existence of
aquifers can be only temporary at best.
3
Volume is reported in cubic meter (m ) .
Because the total quantity of water available in the earth is finite, the global
hydrological system is considered to be a closed system; that is, it is self-contained or in
mass balance.
As such it may be described by a simple mass-balance equation:
V P ( ) - V S ( ) - V R () - V G () - V E () - V T ( ) = 0
Where v refers to the volume and the subscripts are defined as follows:
P = precipitation
T= transpiration
S = storage
R= runoff
G= groundwater infiltration
E= evaporation
Infiltration. In the numerous equations developed to describe infiltration, Hortons
equation is useful to examine because it characterizes three phenomena of interest. Horton
expressed the infiltration rate as:
f=
fc
fo
kt
fc
) e
-
Evaporation. The loss of water from the surface of a lake or other water body is a
function of solar radiation, air and water temperature, wind speed, and the difference in
vapor pressures at the water surface and in the overlying air. As with estimates of infiltration
rate, there are numerous methods for estimating evaporation. Dalton first expressed the
fundamental relationship in the form:
E=
es
ea
) (a + bu)
-
ea
a, b = empirical constants
u = wind speed (m/s)
Summary
Hydrology, scientific discipline concerned with the waters of the Earth, including
their occurrence, distribution, and circulation via the hydrologic cycle and interactions with
living things. It also deals with the chemical and physical properties of water in all its
phases.
Hydrological cycle is the supplying and removing water from the earths surface
where it is through evaporation and transpiration.
Surface Water Hydrology is a natural science that deals with the transport and
distribution of water (liquid, gas, solid) in the atmosphere, on and beneath the earth's surface
where it comes to include all water beyond the earths atmosphere.
Ground-water hydrology is the subdivision of the science of hydrology that deals
with the occurrence, movement, and quality of water beneath the Earth's surface.
References:
http://books.google.com.ph/books?
id=tIVaTXdzdmMC&pg=PA7&dq=surface+water+hydrology&hl=en&sa=X&ei=eAEvUCLL4v_oQS9v4KICQ&ved=0CFQQ6AEwCA#v=onepage&q=surface%20water
%20hydrology&f=false
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/247019/groundwater
file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/All%20Users/Documents/My%20Pictures/Sample
%20Pictures/popopop.htm