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Environmental impact of highway deicing
1971
Struzeski, Ed
Deicing agents for removal of ice and snow from highways and streets are essential to wintertime road maintenance in most areas of the U.S. Due to the ever-increasing use of highway deicing materials, there has been growing concern as to environmental effects resulting from these practices. The state-of-the-art report critically reviews the available information on methods, equipment and materials used for snow and ice removal; chlorides found in rainfall and municipal sewage during the winter; salt runoff from streets and highways; deicing compounds found in surface streams, public water supplies, groundwater, farm ponds and lakes; special additives incorporated into deicing agents; vehicular corrosion and deterioration of highway structures and pavements; and effects on roadside soils, vegetation and trees. Highway deicing can cause injury and damage across a wide environmental spectrum. Recommendations describe future research, development and demonstration efforts necessary to assess and reduce the adverse impact of highway deicing.
Show more [+] Less [-]Hydrochloric acid and air pollution
1971
164 abstracts of monographs and articles. Some foreign literature is included. Entries are arranged alphabetically by authors under topics. Author, title, subject, and geographic location indexes.
Show more [+] Less [-]Phosphate precipitation with ferrous iron
1971
Ghassemi, Masood | Recht, Howard L. (Howard Leonard)
Of a number of methods available for phosphate removal from waste water, chemical precipitation (often called coagulation) using aluminum, ferric iron, ferrous iron and lime is considered to be the most economical. The objective of the present study has been two-fold: To evaluate the effects of pH and reactant concentration on the rate and efficiency of phosphate removal from synthetic and secondary effluent wastewaters and on the nature of the precipitates formed; and to compare the data on the Fe(II)-phosphate precipitation system with the available data for Fe(III)- and Al(III)-phosphate systems. Most of the experiments in the study were conducted on pure orthophosphate solutions and in the absence of dissolved oxygen. Only a limited number of tests were made of the use of ferrous iron for orthophosphate removal from wastewaters containing dissolved oxygen.
Show more [+] Less [-]Report on pollution affecting shellfish harvesting in Galveston Bay, Texas | Sanitation of shellfish growing areas
1971
Water pollution control legislation-- 1971 (proposed amendments to existing legislation)
1971
Catalog of pesticide NMR spectra
1971
Alford-Stevens, Ann | Keith, Lawrence H.
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectra have been recorded, interpreted, and published for organophosphorus pesticides, DDT and related compounds, and carbamate pesticides and some of their degradation products. A Varian HA-100 NMR spectrometer with a variable-temperature probe and a homonuclear spin decoupler was used to record the spectra of 114 compounds. Chemical shifts and coupling constants are shown for each spectrum. The chemical name and source of each pesticide are listed.
Show more [+] Less [-]Temperature prediction in stratified water
1971
Ryan, Patrick J. | Harleman, Donald R. F.
Predictions of the complex annual cycle of temperature changes in a lake or reservoir are necessary if proper water quality control is to be achieved. Many lakes and reservoirs exhibit horizontal homogeneity and thus a time-dependent, one-dimensional model describing the temperature variation in the vertical direction is adequate. A discretized mathematical model was developed based on the absorption and transmission of solar radiation, convection due to surface cooling and advection due to inflows and outflows. The model contains provision for simultaneous or intermittent withdrawal from multi-level outlets and time of travel for inflows within the reservoir.
Show more [+] Less [-]Report on the Charles River; a study of water pollution
1971
Jobin, William R. | Ferullo, Alfred F.
The carbon dioxide system and eutrophication
1971
Morton, Stephen D. | Derse, Philip H. | Sernau, Russell C.
To determine the feasibility of eutrophication control by controlling carbon, three major areas were studied: the steady state, in which the growth rates of algae at various constant, maintained dissolved carbon dioxide concentrations were determined; the non-equilibrium, where natural atmospheric replenishment was the sole carbon source; and algal growth with inorganic bicarbonate as the sole carbon source. In studying growth rates of Chlorella, Microcystis, and Anabaena with respect to carbon availability, it was found that algae can utilize dissolved concentrations of carbon dioxide much lower than those from atmospheric equilibria.
Show more [+] Less [-]Flushing of small shallow lakes
1971
Lomax, Claud C. | Orsborn, John F. (John Frederick)
Flushing of a lake means reducing the pollution by clean inflow with an equivalent outflow of polluted water, a process by which clean water both displaces and mixes with the polluted water. Parameters influencing the effectiveness of the cleansing stream, most important and manageable under laboratory conditions, were investigated. Parameters studied were: inlet velocity, inlet width, depth, and basin shape. Testing was conducted on two depths, two inlet widths, three inlet velocities, and four elliptical basins. Primary purpose of the project was to evaluate the various parameters to determine their influences on flushing efficiency, and develop prediction equations based on geometric and flow characteristics of the systems tested. Analysis were completed to develop a test program, analyze the system for comparison with experimental results, and develop prediction equations which incorporate analytical and experimental results of the study.
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