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Texas Environmental Resources Institute Engineering Tomorrow

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Title: Texas Environmental Resources Institute Engineering Tomorrow


1
Texas Environmental Resources InstituteEngineerin
g Tomorrows Environment Today
Environmental and Water Resources Engineering
Program College of Engineering The University of
Texas at Austin
2
Environmental Engineering Top 20 Programs
Source US News and World Report, 1998
3
Environmental Engineering at UT Austin
  • Only top 20 program West of the Mississippi
    except for California and Washington
  • Only top 20 program in Big XII Conference States
    (TX, OK, KS, CO, NE, MO, IA)
  • Nearest top 20 program is 800 miles away (Georgia
    Tech)

4
Research Sponsors
5
Neal ArmstrongSurface Water Quality Modeling
  • Characterization of point and nonpoint pollution
    sources
  • Water quality modeling in rivers, bays and
    estuaries
  • Effects of aquatic vegetation on water quality
  • Water quality monitoring

6
Randall CharbeneauHydrocarbon Fate and Transport
7
Research Objectives
  • Design of Efficient Free-Product Recovery Systems
    Using Trenches, Skimmer Wells, Single and
    Dual-Pump Wells, and Vacuum Enhanced Recovery
    Systems
  • Evaluate Potential Exposure to Hydrocarbon
    Contaminated Groundwater

8
Plume Reduction Through Biodegradation
9
Richard L. Corsi Indoor Air Quality
  • Indoor air quality is of great importance to the
    collective health of Texans
  • Texans spend 90 of their time indoors
  • Levels of hazardous air pollutants and allergens
    are generally much greater indoors than outdoors
  • Studies suggest that poor IAQ causes as much as
    a 168 billion dollar/year drag on the U.S.
    economy.

10
Indoor Air Quality Research Initiatives at UT
Austin
  • Volatilization of hazardous air pollutants
    (HAPs) from drinking water to indoor air
  • Indoor air quality in public schools
  • Emissions of HAPs from computers
  • Emissions of HAPs from photocopy machines
  • Human exposure to HAPs - that new car odor
  • Interaction of HAPs with indoor materials
  • HAP levels in homes above contaminated soil
  • Development of a state-of-the-art indoor air
    quality model for residential homes, public
    schools, and office buildings

11
Interaction of Hazardous Air Pollutants Indoor
Materials
  • The following slides include the results of
    recent studies to better understand how volatile
    and hazardous air pollutants interact with indoor
    materials. Such interactions can lead to
    prolonged chemical retention in homes, schools,
    and offices. Humans may then be exposed to these
    chemicals via ingestion (e.g., eating food that
    was contaminated by air pollutants), dermal
    contact (e.g., infant skin contact with
    contaminated carpet), or inhalation (e.g., as
    chemicals are slowly released from materials to
    indoor air over time). The latter is clearly
    illustrated when non-smokers receive a smoking
    room in a hotel, and find the odors
    objectionable. These odors are from chemicals
    that desorb from material surfaces such as
    carpet, walls, and curtains.

12
Dichlorobenzene Carpet
These results were obtained in a novel test
chamber at UT. They depict the extent to which
dichlorobenzene (a major ingredient of moth cakes
and a suspected human carcinogen) can adsorb to
carpet under various conditions. The solid line
depicts what the dichlorobenzene concentration
would be in the absence of the material. Such
results can be used to develop parameters that
allow for the prediction of chemical storage and
release over time.
13
Predicted Measured PERC
These results depict the concentration of
tetrachloroethene (a suspected human carcinogen
and common dry cleaning agent) in air adjacent to
carpet. The symbols depict measured data. The
solid line represents predicted values using a
novel model developed at UT. The good comparison
between predicted and measured values indicates
that the model can be used for predicting levels
of pollutants in indoor air after indoor
contamination, and should be useful for
establishing delay times prior to humans
re-occupying a contaminated building.
14
Material Effects DCB
These results illustrate the extent to which
dichlorobenzene is adsorbed to several different
materials over a 10 hour release period. Carpet
appears to be the interior material with the
greatest affinity for sorbing and storing
dichlorobenzene. However, sorption can also
occur to material such as unpainted, painted, and
wall-papered gypsum board, vinyl flooring, and
even to apples that are left exposed to
contaminants in indoor air.
15
Earnest F. GloynaSuper Critical Water Oxidation
(SCWO)
  • Hazardous wastewater converted to near drinking
    water quality standards
  • Can take less than one minute of treatment time
  • Environmentally friendly and economical
  • By-products are
  • recoverable heat
  • acceptable gaseous emissions
  • possible inorganic precipitates
  • small amounts of oxidized ash

16
Using SCWO to Treat Wastewater
  • Wastewater contains 30 hazardous organic
    substrate.
  • Treated effluent can meet drinking water quality

17
Using SCWO to Treat Sludge
  • Hazardous biological sludge contains 5 foul
    organic substrate
  • Treated effluent can be released to the
    environment

18
Hillary HartEnvironmental Risk Communication
  • Good environmental policy requires good
    communication.
  • Such policy is crafted by many stakeholders
    government, business, regulators, the public.
  • Stakeholders must talk same language.

19
Who Thinks Environmental Risk Communication Is
Necessary?
  • . . . decision-making responsibility involving
    risk issues must be shared with the American
    people.
  • William Ruckelhaus, 1986
  • . . . we must ensure that citizens have a
    fuller understanding of the inevitable tradeoffs
    . . . in the management of risk.
  • Lee M. Thomas, 1986

20
How Has Environmental Risk Communication Changed?
  • No longer one-way messages from experts to
    non-experts . . .
  • but rather . . .
  • -- an interactive process of exchange of
    information and opinion among individuals,
    groups, and institutions -
  • National Research Council, 1989

21
Current Problems
  • Public debate has become polarized
  • Two camps developers/industry vs. zero-growth
    proponents
  • Each camp has its own support system -- both seek
    credibility
  • Public confidence in big business and govt has
    declined
  • 55 to 19 between 1966 and 1980

22
Risk Communication now has its own body of
research
  • Mental Model Approach
  • focus on cognitive studies
  • Procedural Approach
  • focus on risk perception and social movement
    studies
  • Peter Sandmans Work
  • practical applications for government and industry

23
My Research Approaches
  • Collect data through surveys and focus group work
  • Test risk messages in verbal, written, and
    graphical forms.
  • Use case studies to gather best practices.
  • Devise and test mechanisms for ensuring
    interactive communication (the feedback loop).
  • Create communication plans that integrate
    communication into risk management.

24
Ed HolleyTransport and Fate of Pollutants in
Water Bodies
  • Analyticalstudies
  • Laboratorystudies
  • Fieldstudies

25
Lynn KatzContaminant Fate and Transport
  • Research Areas
  • Contaminant Fate and Transport
  • Contaminant Remediation
  • Multimedia Learning Tools
  • Areas of Expertise
  • Water Chemistry
  • Surface Chemistry
  • Funding Agencies
  • National Science Foundation
  • Department of Energy
  • DuPont Engineering

26
Contaminant Transport
Toxics, Inc
Well
Toxic Ions
Arsenic
Lead
Do We Meet Water Quality Standards?
Gasoline
Benzene
Toluene
Trichloroethylene
Chlorinated Solvents
Uranium
Radionuclides
Plutonium
27
Contaminant Fate and Transport
Air Water
H2O
Rock
Field Scale Predict Transport
Macroscopic Quantify Removal
Microscopic Identify Reactions
28
Research Strategy
  • Identify Reactions
  • that increase/decrease contaminant
    concentrations.
  • Quantify Removal
  • as a function of environmental conditions.
  • Incorporate these Reactions
  • into models that will enable us to predict
    transport.
  • Develop Treatment Processes
  • that employ these reactions to reduce contaminant
    levels.

29
Spyros KinnasOcean Engineering and Computational
Hydrodynamics
  • External and internal propulsor flows
  • Propulsor/hull interaction
  • Prediction of cavitation
  • Design of optimum propeller blades
  • Wave dynamics and wave/body interactions
  • Viscous flows

30
Cavity Planforms on a Propeller Blade
Simulated
Observed
31
Flow Field Around a Propeller
32
Transient Flow Through a Propulsor
33
B-spline Representation of a Propeller
34
Interaction of waves and ocean bodies
35
Viscous Flow Inside a Channel
36
Biological Treatment of Vapor Phase Contaminants
  • Dr. Kerry A. Kinney
  • Civil Engineering Department

37
Why is Air Pollution Control Important?
  • Approximately 46 million Americans currently live
    in areas that do not meet EPAs ambient air
    quality standards
  • VOCs NOx
  • Ozone SMOG
  • Approximately 3.7 million tons of air toxics are
    emitted annually.

38
What does this mean in Texas?
39
UT Program in Air Resources Engineering
  • Source Characterization
  • Ambient Air Monitoring
  • Air Pollution Control

40
Vapor Phase Bioreactors
  • Use microorganisms to remove pollutants from air.
  • Advantages
  • high efficiency
  • minimal byproduct generation
  • less energy intensive
  • lower operating costs

Biologically Active Packed Bed
41
Current Research
  • Develop Environmentally Friendly Air Pollution
    Control Systems
  • Specific Applications
  • Treat waste gas streams from paint spray booth
    operations or from hazardous waste site
    remediation activities.
  • Explore New Types of Bioreactors
  • Fungal Based Bioreactors !

42
Fungal Vapor-Phase Bioreactor
43
Fungus Doing Your Dirty Work For You!
44
Desmond F. Lawler Physical/Chemical Treatment
Processes for Water and Wastewater
  • Removal of Particles
  • Flocculation
  • Sedimentation
  • Filtration
  • Membrane Processes--Ultrafiltration
  • Removal of Soluble Contaminants
  • Precipitation of Metals
  • Stripping of Dissolved Gases
  • Adsorption of Natural Organic Matter

45
Current and Recent Applications
  • Removal of disinfection by-products from drinking
    water
  • Hydrodynamic effects on particle collisions in
    flocculation
  • Particle and fluid dynamics in continuous flow
    sedimentation
  • Softening and ultrafiltration a drinking water
    treatment strategy
  • Recycling water in semiconductor manufacturing
  • Dynamics of deep bed filtration
  • Lead removal from soil
  • Chromium removal from groundwater

46
Drinking Water Treatment From Particle Size to
Plant Performance
Analysis of Continuous Flow Sedimentation
Particle Trajectories in Flocculation/Sedimentatio
n
a
j
a
i
Critical
Open
X
c
47
Howard LiljestrandEnvironmental Chemistry
  • Air Chemistry
  • Coupling air chemistry with vertical turbulent
    transport
  • Predicting rates of reaction from molecular
    structure
  • Collection and treatment of Volatile Organic
    Compounds
  • Prediction of air quality from accidental releases

48
(No Transcript)
49
Ray LoehrSite Remediation
  • Environmentally acceptable endpoints
  • Kinetics of chemical release from soil and
    sediment
  • Technologies for site remediation
  • Data for risk-based site decisions

50
Remediation Approaches
  • Obtaining sound knowledge for sound decisions
  • Based on Assessment of site-specific risks
  • Performance based evaluations

51
Daene McKinneyWater Resources Planning and
Management
52
David MaidmentGIS in Water Resources
  • Better flood risk assessment
  • Better drought planning
  • Better water quality planning

53
CRWR-FloodMap
CRWR-PrePro
AvRAS
Digital map database
54
3D Flood Modeling
55
Surface Water Rights in Texas
Trinity
Sulphur
Brazos
Colorado
Rio Grande
8000 water right locations
City of Austin
Nueces
23 main river basins
56
Water Rights in the Sulphur Basin
Water right location Stream gage location
Drainage areas delineated from Digital Elevation
Models are used to estimate flow at water right
locations based on flow at stream gage locations
57
Water Quality Planning in the Trinity Basin
  • Discharge points
  • Water right locations
  • Water quality segment points
  • USGS flow gage locations
  • Surface water quality monitoring stations

58
Points Connected by a River Network
59
Global Outreach
The United States is pre-eminent among nations
in the development of industrial and scientific
techniques. The material resources which we can
afford to use for the assistance of other peoples
are limited. But our imponderable resources in
technical knowledge are constantly growing and
are inexhaustible. I believe that we should make
available to peace-loving people the benefits of
our store of technical knowledge in order to help
them realize their aspirations for a better life
President Harry S. Truman Inaugural Speech,
January 1949
60
Joe MalinaMunicipal and industrial wastewater
treatment
  • Environmental impacts and controls from highway
    construction
  • Sludge handling, treatment, disposal and
    management
  • Inactivation and fate of indicator organisms in
    wastewater sludge
  • Solid waste engineering and management

61
Runoff Quality from Highways
62
Gerald E. Speitel, JrTreatment Processes for
Hazardous Organic Chemicals
  • Biodegradation
  • Adsorption
  • Oxidation
  • Drinking water treatment
  • Treatment process design
  • Treatment process computer simulation

63
Treatment Process Engineering
  • Improve understanding of basic mechanisms
    affecting process performance
  • Develop new technologies
  • More cost-effective approaches to design and
    operate treatment processes
  • Reduce raw materials consumption and waste
    production

64
Schematic of an Experimental Reactor
65
Experimental Laboratory Reactor
66
Results from the Reactor
Lumen Residence Time 1.5 min
Lumen Residence Time 2.5 min
Lumen Residence Time 3.7 min
Shell Residence Time Constant at 10 min
67
EWRE Institute Vision
  • What does Texas need in the future?
  • What are we doing about supplying that now?
  • How can we define our mission in such a manner as
    to enlist the support of donors, program
    sponsors, and the University administration

68
Texas Population and Water Resources
  • By 2050, twice the population to support on less
    water than now
  • Increasing dependence on more polluted surface
    water
  • Droughts reduce water resources by half or more

69
SUPPORT LABS A Microbiological preparation
lab B Clean rooms C Temperature humidity
control rooms D Cold Storage
WATER TREATMENT
WASTE MINIMIZATION
AIR LAB
LABORATORY FACILITIES
ORGANIC INORG. LABS
SITE REMEDIATION
NEW INITIATIVES
WASTE WATER TREATMENT
COMPUTER LAB
SEMINAR/ CONFERENCE
ADMINISTRATION
SUPPORT
STUDENT OFFICES
FACULTY OFFICES
70
Current EWRE Program Data
  • 15 faculty
  • 100 graduate students
  • 10 professional research staff
  • 25 graduate courses offered per year
  • 200 graduate degrees granted over the past five
    years
  • Average research funding of 6.9 million/yr

71
Future Areas of Excellence
  • Treatment process engineering
  • Water resources engineering
  • Air resources engineering
  • Environmental remediation
  • Water quality
  • Risk analysis and assessment
  • Environmental management and policy

72
Future Directions
  • Water reuse planning, management, and treatment
  • Drought planning and management
  • Indoor air quality
  • Pollution prevention and industrial ecology
  • Environmental toxicology
  • Environmental molecular sciences
  • Solid waste management

73
Future Concerns in Texas
  • Environmental sustainability
  • Rapid population growth
  • Diminishing supply of drinking water
  • Air pollution in urban areas
  • Hazardous chemicals

74
Fund Raising Goals
  • New Environmental and Water Resources Engineering
    Research Facility
  • Building (12,000,000)
  • Equipment (3,000,000)
  • Endowments
  • Technical staff (3,000,000)
  • Equipment upgrades (1,500,000)
  • Distinguished Visiting Scholar (2,000,000)
  • Total Funds Needed 21,500,000

75
Impact of a New Facility
  • A focal point for research and educational
    excellence
  • An environment for integrated, interdisciplinary
    projects
  • State of the art laboratories
  • Consolidation of all EWRE activities in one
    facility

76
Impact of a New Facility
  • Continue momentum for growth of the EWRE program
  • A base of support for leveraging external funds
  • A unique opportunity to better serve Texas
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