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Hydraulic properties related to stream reaeration

Abstract

The paper reports the results of recent and current field tracer experiments designed to investigate the relationships between the reaeration capacity of a flowing stream and the stream's hydraulic properties. The purpose of the studies is to develop models for the accurate prediction of stream reaeration capacity on the basis of observation of the associated hydraulic properties. The ability of a flowing stream to absorb oxygen from the overlying atmosphere is the principal process by which the stream is able to recover its dissolved oxygen resources once they have been depleted by bacterial degradation of organic wastes. Accurate knowledge of stream reaeration capacity is therefore a necessity in determining the required degree of waste treatment, and the associated costs, in any specific case. Oxygen absorption can only occur at the air-water interface, hence reaeration is a direct function of the rate of surface water replacement due to turbulent mixing. The latter is not directly observable, and so reaeration capacity has not been observable before the quite recent development of a gaseous radiotracer technique for field measurement of reaeration. This procedure involves the simultaneous use of three tracers, namely a fluorescent dye for time of flow, tritiated water for accurate dispersion  More>>
Authors:
Tsivoglou, E C; Wallace, J R [1] 
  1. School of Civil Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA (United States)
Publication Date:
Sep 15, 1970
Product Type:
Conference
Report Number:
IAEA-SM-129/31
Resource Relation:
Conference: Symposium on isotope hydrology, Vienna (Austria), 9-13 Mar 1970; Other Information: 8 refs, 2 figs, 2 tabs; Related Information: In: Isotope hydrology 1970. Proceedings of a symposium, Proceedings series, 918 pages.
Subject:
58 GEOSCIENCES; ABSORPTION; DISSOLVED GASES; HYDROLOGY; KRYPTON 85; ORGANIC WASTES; OXYGEN; PONDS; STREAMS; TRACER TECHNIQUES; TRITIUM OXIDES; WASTE PROCESSING
OSTI ID:
20889932
Research Organizations:
International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna (Austria); United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, Paris (France)
Country of Origin:
IAEA
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ISBN 92-0-040084-1; ISSN 0074-1884; TRN: XA0701549054546
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
page(s) 509-522
Announcement Date:
Aug 13, 2007

Citation Formats

Tsivoglou, E C, and Wallace, J R. Hydraulic properties related to stream reaeration. IAEA: N. p., 1970. Web.
Tsivoglou, E C, & Wallace, J R. Hydraulic properties related to stream reaeration. IAEA.
Tsivoglou, E C, and Wallace, J R. 1970. "Hydraulic properties related to stream reaeration." IAEA.
@misc{etde_20889932,
title = {Hydraulic properties related to stream reaeration}
author = {Tsivoglou, E C, and Wallace, J R}
abstractNote = {The paper reports the results of recent and current field tracer experiments designed to investigate the relationships between the reaeration capacity of a flowing stream and the stream's hydraulic properties. The purpose of the studies is to develop models for the accurate prediction of stream reaeration capacity on the basis of observation of the associated hydraulic properties. The ability of a flowing stream to absorb oxygen from the overlying atmosphere is the principal process by which the stream is able to recover its dissolved oxygen resources once they have been depleted by bacterial degradation of organic wastes. Accurate knowledge of stream reaeration capacity is therefore a necessity in determining the required degree of waste treatment, and the associated costs, in any specific case. Oxygen absorption can only occur at the air-water interface, hence reaeration is a direct function of the rate of surface water replacement due to turbulent mixing. The latter is not directly observable, and so reaeration capacity has not been observable before the quite recent development of a gaseous radiotracer technique for field measurement of reaeration. This procedure involves the simultaneous use of three tracers, namely a fluorescent dye for time of flow, tritiated water for accurate dispersion measurement, and dissolved krypton-85 for measurement of gas transfer. Field results obtained by this technique are highly reproducible. Field tracer studies of the reaeration capacities of three medium-sized streams have been conducted over a total of about fifty river miles. Associated hydraulic properties such as stream flow, cross-sectional area, depth, velocity, hydraulic gradient and dispersion have also been measured. Features such as waterfalls, rapids and pools are included, and more than eighty observations of the reaeration capacities of individual stream reaches have been made. The paper reports the observed relationships between stream reaeration capacity and such hydraulic properties as those noted above, with appropriate inferences regarding such non-observable hydraulic parameters as the rate of surface replacement, mixing length and frequency of mix. (author)}
place = {IAEA}
year = {1970}
month = {Sep}
}