541SYL

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WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY Fall 2014 Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering CE 541 - Physicochemical Water and Wastewater Treatment Professor: D.R. Yonge [email protected] Office: Sloan 123 Office Hours: Open Door Policy. (If you miss me in my office send me an email and we can set up a time to meet.) Text Crittenden, C. et al., Water Treatment - Principles and Design, 3 rd edition, Wiley Publishing, 2012. Class Homepage http://www.ce.wsu.edu/facstaff/~yonge/ce541 Recorded lectures within 24-48 hrs can be found at http://www.ams.wsu.edu/Videostreaming/ClassList.aspx Course Objectives To give the student a sound foundation in the theory and design of physical and chemical water and wastewater treatment processes. Expectations Read the material to be covered in the next lecture. Start the homework early! Attempt the problems independently, ask me questions via office visit or email. Working with peers is also fine. You need to strain your brain! You should be able to mentally bench press 250+ kg. by the end of the semester. Academic Integrity: All members of the University community share responsibility for maintaining and promoting the principles of truth and academic honesty. The Office of Student Conduct has a policy defining academic dishonesty and the procedures to follow if dishonesty occurs. This information can be found at www.studentconduct.wsu.edu . Cheating or plagiarism in any form will not be tolerated. Cheating includes, but is not limited to, copying work or allowing your work to be copied. Plagiarism includes resubmitting previously graded homework from a previous semester, even if it was your own work. If academic dishonesty has occurred on any homework, test or other assignment, the incident will be reported to the Office of Student Conduct and the student(s) involved will receive no credit (a score of zero) for that particular material. A second incident of cheating may result in dismissal from the university. Safety and Emergency Notifications Washington State University is committed to enhancing the safety of the students, faculty, staff, and visitors. It is highly recommended that you review the Campus Safety Plan (http://safetyplan.wsu.edu/ ) and visit the Office of Emergency Management web site (http://oem.wsu.edu/ ) for a comprehensive

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Transcript of 541SYL

WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY Fall 2014 Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

CE 541 - Physicochemical Water and Wastewater Treatment

Professor: D.R. Yonge [email protected]

Office: Sloan 123 Office Hours: Open Door Policy. (If you miss me in my office send me an email and we can set up a time to meet.)

Text Crittenden, C. et al., Water Treatment - Principles and Design, 3rd edition, Wiley Publishing, 2012. Class Homepage http://www.ce.wsu.edu/facstaff/~yonge/ce541 Recorded lectures within 24-48 hrs can be found at http://www.ams.wsu.edu/Videostreaming/ClassList.aspx Course Objectives To give the student a sound foundation in the theory and design of physical and chemical water and wastewater treatment processes. Expectations

• Read the material to be covered in the next lecture. • Start the homework early! Attempt the problems independently, ask me questions via office visit

or email. Working with peers is also fine. • You need to strain your brain! You should be able to mentally bench press 250+ kg. by the end

of the semester.

Academic Integrity: • All members of the University community share responsibility for maintaining and promoting the

principles of truth and academic honesty. • The Office of Student Conduct has a policy defining academic dishonesty and the procedures to

follow if dishonesty occurs. This information can be found at www.studentconduct.wsu.edu. • Cheating or plagiarism in any form will not be tolerated. Cheating includes, but is not limited to,

copying work or allowing your work to be copied. Plagiarism includes resubmitting previously graded homework from a previous semester, even if it was your own work.

• If academic dishonesty has occurred on any homework, test or other assignment, the incident will be reported to the Office of Student Conduct and the student(s) involved will receive no credit (a score of zero) for that particular material.

• A second incident of cheating may result in dismissal from the university. Safety and Emergency Notifications Washington State University is committed to enhancing the safety of the students, faculty, staff, and visitors. It is highly recommended that you review the Campus Safety Plan (http://safetyplan.wsu.edu/) and visit the Office of Emergency Management web site (http://oem.wsu.edu/) for a comprehensive

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listing of university policies, procedures, statistics, and information related to campus safety, emergency management, and the health and welfare of the campus community. Accommodation Students with Disabilities: Reasonable accommodations are available for students with a documented disability. If you have a disability and need accommodations to fully participate in this class, please either visit or call the Access Center (Washington Building 217; 509-335-3417) to schedule an appointment with an Access Advisor. All accommodations MUST be approved through the Access Center. For more information contact a Disability Specialist on your home campus: Homework Requirements Homework will be assigned when appropriate. Solutions must be CLEARLY presented; indicating any assumptions and explaining steps. That is, make the solution presentation in enough detail that someone having a similar undergraduate course (e.g., CE 442) and the text can understand and learn from the solution. Tests There will be two in-semester tests and a comprehensive final. Grading

Exam 1 and 2 50% Homework 20% Final Exam 30% TOTAL 100%

Topical Outline

Subject Reading Class

Aquatic Chemistry Review

Chapter 5 5.1, 2, 4, 5, 6

1 - 2

Reactor Analysis Chapter 6 6.1 – 6.7

3 - 6

Coagulation, Mixing, Flocculation Chapter 9 9-1, 2, 3, 4, 7

Chapter 6: 6-10

8 - 12

EXAM I 13

Removal of Selected Constituents Chapter 20 20.4

14 -15

Sedimentation Chapter 10 10.1 – 10.6

16 - 19

Filtration Chapter 11 11.1 – 11.6

20 - 22

Membrane Filtration Chapter 12 12.1 – 12.6

23 - 25

Mass Transfer Chapter 7 7.1, 2, 4, 6

26 - 29

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EXAM II 31

Disinfection Chapter 13 32 - 34

Aeration/Stripping Notes, Chapter 14 35 - 37

Adsorption Chapter 15 38 - 39

Ion Exchange Chapter 16 40 - 41

Reverse Osmosis Chapter 17 42 - 43

FINAL EXAM