33 research outputs found
Source control options for reducing emission of priority pollutants from urban areas.
The overall aim of the ScorePP project is to develop comprehensive and appropriate source
control strategies that authorities, cities, water utilities and the chemical industry can employ
to reduce emissions of priority pollutants (PPs) from urban areas into the receiving water
environment. Focus is on the 33 priority and priority hazardous substances and substance
groups identified in the European Water Framework Directive. However, this list may be
expanded to include emerging pollutants or reduced if appropriate model compounds can be
identified. The initial work focuses on 67 substances, including substances identified in the
proposed European environmental quality standard (EQS) directive as well as the defined
example compounds and several organometallic derivatives. Information on inherent
properties, environmental presence and fate, and legislative issues is made available in open
database format, and a data management system combining chemical identification (CAS#),
NACE economic activity classifications and NOSE-P emission source classifications has been
developed as a basis for spatial characterisation of PP sources using GIS. Further work will
focus on dynamic urban scale source-flux models, identifying emission patterns and
optimising monitoring programmes in case studies and multi-criteria comparison of source
control versus end-of-pipe mitigation options in relation to their economic, social and
environmental impacts
Developments in unsteady pipe flow friction modelling
This paper reviews a number of unsteady friction models for transient pipe flow. Two distinct unsteady friction models, the Zielke and the Brunone models, are investigated in detail. The Zielke model, originally developed for transient laminar flow, has been selected to verify its effectiveness for "low Reynolds number" transient turbulent flow. The Brunone model combines local inertia and wall friction unsteadiness. This model is verified using the Vardy's analytically deduced shear decay coefficient C* to predict the Brunone's friction coefficient k rather than use the traditional trial and error method for estimating k. The two unsteady friction models have been incorporated into the method of characteristics water hammer algorithm. Numerical results from the quasi-steady friction model and the Zielke and the Brunone unsteady friction models are compared with results of laboratory measurements for water hammer cases with laminar and low Reynolds number turbulent flows. Conclusions about the range of validity for the three friction models are drawn. In addition, the convergence and stability of these models are addressed.Anton Bergant, Angus Ross Simpson, John Vìtkovsk
Computational assemblage of ordinary differential equations for Chlorophyll-a using a lake process equation library and measured data of Lake Kasumigaura
The software LAGRAMGE for computational assemblage and adaptation of ODE by using the expert knowledge and measured data has been applied for the simulation of chl-a in Lake Kasumigaura. As a result two types of chl-a models were discovered: (1) chl-a equations without considering zooplankton grazing assembled and trained by data of consecutive years were data of the last year was used for testing, and (2) chl-a equations considering zooplankton grazing assembled and trained by data of the years 1986 to 1989. The test results of the different models have demonstrated that LAGRAMGE can discover ODE that allow to simulate chl-a in Lake Kasumigaura for a variety of years. However the generalisation of discovered equations for unseen data of consecutive years was unsatisfactory, and the accuracy of calculated trajectories with regards to timing and magnitudes of peak events was moderate. The results have highlighted the importance of nutrients as growth limiting factors, and the need for considering functional algae groups in order to appropriately represent their selective grazing by zooplankton. © 2006 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.N. Atanasova; F. Recknagel; L. Todorovski; S. Dzeroski; B. Kompar
Automated modelling of a food web in lake Bled using measured data and a library of domain knowledge
Copyright © 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.In this paper, we applied automated modelling (computer model construction) method to the task of modelling a complex lake ecosystem. The method (Lagramge) integrates domain expert knowledge in the process of automated model induction from given data set. The data set comprises long-term measurements (from 1995 to 2002) of physical, chemical and biological data in lake Bled, Slovenia. Given expert knowledge in terms of a simple food web concept and rules for modelling thereof, we first induced a model for long-term dynamics of the phytoplankton in the lake. Failing to obtain a good fit, we also induced models of phytoplankton dynamics for each year separately. The differences between these models indicate structural dynamics of the food web in lake Bled, i.e., indicate that the behaviour of the lake is changing from year to year. Additionally, we successfully induced a three-equation model (nutrient–phytoplankton–zooplankton) on the data from year 1996.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0304380