380 likes | 411 Views
Principal Water Pollutants. March 16, 2011. Standards. W-5: SWBAT describe the process of wastewater treatment W-6: SWBAT list and describe the major types of water pollution. Wastewater. Def: Water that contains waste from home and industry. Goal of Wastewater Treatment.
E N D
Principal Water Pollutants • March 16, 2011
Standards • W-5: SWBAT describe the process of wastewater treatment • W-6: SWBAT list and describe the major types of water pollution
Wastewater • Def: Water that contains waste from home and industry
Goal of Wastewater Treatment • Water is filtered and treated to make the water clean enough to return to a river or lake
What’s in the Wastewater? • Most of the wastewater from homes contain biodegradable material that can be broken down by living organisms • Water from the kitchen and toilet contain plant and animal wasters, paper, and soaps all of which are biodegradable
Biodegradable or Not? • Banana Peel • Soda Can • Slaughterhouse waste • Manure • Glass • A polyester shirt
The Womp Womp Factor • Wastewater treatment plants may not remove all the harmful substances in water • Ex: Household water that contains toxic substances
Sewage Sludge • A byproduct of wastewater treatment • The solid material that remains after treatment
$$$ • Sludge that contains a high concentration of toxic chemicals must be disposed of as hazardous waste • The sludge is often incinerated, and then the ash is buried in a secure landfill
Sustainable Sludge • If the toxicity of the sludge can be reduced to safe levels, sludge can be: • 1) Turned into fertilizer • 2) Combined with clay to make bricks for buildings
Wastewater Treatment Process • 1) Filtration • 2) 1st Settling Tank • 3) Aeration Tank • 4) 2nd Settling Tank • 5) Chlorination
Fats, Oils, and Grease (F.O.G’s) • Builds up in the sewer system and can cause back ups • Do’s: • Recycle used cooking oil • Put food scraps in trash • Don’t: • Pour F.O.G.s down the drain • Use the toilet as a trash can • Use rags or cloths towels to clean grease
#2 Artificial Eutrophication • Eutrophication caused by humans
Eutrophication • def: A natural process where a body of water receives excess nutrients, which causes a loss of oxygen. • Some nutrients are GOOD, but too many may cause a body of water to become eutrophic
Causes of Eutrophication • Fertilizers from farms, lawns, and gardens • Phosphates in some detergents
Whiteboards • On your whiteboards, write down the definition of thermal pollution and provide some major causes of such.
#3: Thermal Pollution • def: the degradation of water quality by changing the temperature of a natural body of water
Sources of Thermal Pollution • Power plants and other industries use water in their cooling systems and then discharge the warm water into a lake or river • CFU
It’s getting hot in herre... • As the water temperature rises, the amount of dissolved oxygen decreases
#4: Groundwater Pollution • Pollutants usually enter groundwater when polluted surface water percolates down from the surface.
Leaking Underground Storage Tanks(LUST) • Major source of groundwater pollution • Estimated 1 million+ in the US • Gas stations • Storage tanks develop leaks as they age, allowing pollutants to enter the ground
Problems with LUST • The location of an aging UST is not always known, so tanks cannot be replaced or repaired until they have leaked enough pollutants.
Other Sources of Groundwater Pollution • Septic Tanks • Unlined landfills
Whiteboards-PPM • Water contamination is often measured in parts per million (ppm). • If the concentration of a pollutant is 5 ppm, there are 5 parts of the pollutant in 1 million parts of water. • Q: If the concentration of gasoline is 3 ppm in 650,000 L of water, how many liters of gasoline are there in the water?
If there are 10 ppm of arsenic in 500,000L of water, how many liters of arsenic are there?
Clean-up Time • Groundwater pollution is one of the most challenging environmental problem the world faces. • The process for some aquifers to recycle water and purge contaminants can take 100s or 1000s of years
Sticky Icky Icky • Pollution can cling to the materials that make up an aquifer. • Putting clean water in a dirty aquifer is useless!
Ocean Pollution • At least 85% of ocean pollution comes from activities on land
Oil Spills • Each year, approximately 37 million gallons of oil from tanker accidents are spilled into the oceans
Caution: Slippery when...Oily? • Oil spills only account for 5% of oil pollution in the oceans. • Most of the oil that enters the oceans come from cities and towns. • 200-300 million gallons/yr
Quick Check • How can limiting nonpoint sources of oil pollution help keep the oceans clean?
Biomagnification • def: the build up of pollutants at higher levels of the food chain