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European Research into Sewer Sediments and Associated Pollutants and Processes
Authors:Richard Ashley  Bob Crabtree  Alasdair Fraser  Thorkild Hvitved-Jacobsen
Affiliation:1Pennine Water Group, Univ. of Bradford, West Yorkshire BD71DP, U.K.
2WRc plc, Frankland Road, Swindon SN5?8YF, UK.
3Ewan Associates Limited, 12 The Beta Centre, Stirling Univ. Innovation Park, Stirling?FK9?4NF, U.K.
4Dept. of Environmental Engineering, Aalborg Univ., Sohngaardsholmsvej 57, DK-9000 Aalborg, Denmark.
Abstract:Research investigating all aspects of solids in sewer systems has been underway in Europe for nearly two decades. Due to the early development of European sewer systems, originally as part of the industrialization process more than 100 years ago, urbanization has caused the original sewer networks to become overloaded and unable to function efficiently. Operational problems of interest include loss of ability to convey (designed) flows and the performance of “overflows” to relieve the high flows discharging directly into rivers and other watercourses. Research has characterized the nature of the solids getting into sewer systems, how they behave in terms of transport, and some of the main aspects of their effects. It has been possible to demonstrate that much of the pollutants found in suspension during storms, and likely to be discharged from overflows, originate from the predominantly organic “near bed solids” which accumulate in systems during dry weather. New ideas for the way in which the sediments are transported and the importance of the transformation processes, are leading toward the development of a unified and integrated understanding of the way in which sewer solids behave and the associated biochemical transformation processes.
Keywords:Europe  Sewage  Sediment  Pollutants  Erosion  Simulation  
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