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  • 1

    Concentration, units & dimensions

    Learning Objectives:

    Define Environmental Fluid Mechanics (EFM)

    List and define three types of concentrationmeasures

    List the dimensions of concentration, massfraction, and the diffusion coefficient

    Convert concentration measures amongvarious units (i.e. mg/l to mol/l)

    Motivational Question:

    How do you quantify the amount of a

    chemical dispersed in the environment?

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    Examples of EnvironmentalFluid Mechanics Projects

    OCEN 489 and 689Scott A. Socolofsky

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    Environmental Fluid Mechanics

    Definition: Answers to how natural processesin the hydrosphere change concentrations

    Transport processes:

    Diffusion (molecular and turbulent)

    Advection

    Transformation processes: (key processes)

    Dissolution

    Chemical reactions

    Critter metabolisms

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    Transport in the Hydrosphere

    Courtesy of Chin Wu.

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    Concentrations

    Concentrationboundary layer.Turbulencestructure isclearly evident.

    Waves collage courtesy of John Crimaldi

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    Hydromechanics

    Breaking wavesmove sediment,generate seaspray, oxygenatethe water columnand provideturbulence,among otherimportant coastaland offshoreprocesses

    Courtesy of Benoit Cushman-Roisin, DartmouthCollege

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    Point Pollution Sources

    WastewaterOutfalls

    Courtesy of the CORMIX project

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    Non-Point Pollution Sources

    Courtesy of Roanoke County, VA

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    Storm Water Runoff

    Pollutant loadsinclude point andnon-pointsources

    Courtesy of USGS

  • 10

    Water Quality

    Measurement ofa wealth of waterqualityparameters

    Courtesy of Cortland College

  • 11

    Limnology

    Zooplankton,phytoplankton,and other lakeinhabitants

    Courtesy of Gertrud Cronberg

  • 12

    Natural Preservation

    RestorationandProvisionfor NaturalConditions

    Courtesy of College of Natural Resources, University of Idaho

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    TopicsDiffusion

    Advection

    River Mixing Processes

    Transformation

    Air/water Interface

    Sediment/water Interface

    Tidal Mixing

    Point source near-field: Jets and Plumes

    Environmental fate and transport modeling


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