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 | EDITORIAL CATEGORY - TRANSMISSION AND STORAGE |
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Revisiting the Selection of Stainless Steel in Water and Wastewater Treatment Environments: Part 3
Water Engineering & Management
July 2002
Frederick Bloetscher, Richard J. Bullock, Robert E. Fergen, Gerhardt M. Witt, and Gary D. Fries
Based on the City of Hollywood’s experience, the use of 316L stainless steel should be evaluated carefully due to the potential for problems in the erection and construction of water treatment facilities that will be in contact with high chloride water and/or other corrosive chemistries. As with many membrane facilities, much of the stainless steel is exposed (not buried), which subjected it to atmospheric as well as water quality problems. Therefore, unless the quality control of the raw and reject water (chemical, physical and microbial) can be assured, 316L stainless steel may not be the appropriate material for engineers to specify.
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Revisiting the Selection of Stainless Steel in Water and Wastewater Treatment Environments: Part 2
Water Engineering & Management
June 2002
Frederick Bloetscher, Richard Bullock, Robert Fergen, Gerhardt Witt, & Gary Fries
Aerobic bacteria (Crenothrix, Gallionella) primarily are encountered in the fresh surface waters, although anaerobic sulfate-reducing bacteria and facultative strains also are encountered. Ground waters are more likely to contain anaerobic and facultative bacteria, as well as Gallionella than surface waters.3 Sulfate-reducing bacteria also are found in seawater.3
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High Pressure Pumps Boost Water Over Hilly Jamaican Terrain
Water & Wastes Digest
April 2002
In a municipal water supply application in Jamaica, ITT Industries’ Goulds Pumps unit is supplying the pumps and the expertise to improve aging and inadequate water supply infrastructure. These new water supply projects will improve the health of the customers served there by providing clean, potable water.
Manzanar
Water Engineering & Management
February 2002
Mike Harrington
Two months after the bombing of Pearl Harbor (December 7, 1941), President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order number 9066, calling for the relocation of Japanese American citizens and aliens. The order authorized the secretary of war to exclude citizens and aliens of Japanese descent from the West Coast as a security measure against sabotage and espionage. This order empowered the round-up of 70,000 U.S. citizens of Japanese descent and 42,000 resident aliens.
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Pumping System Helps Town Bring New Development Up to Code
Water Engineering & Management
November 2001
When a Leicester, Mass., developer planned a subdivision of 16 houses at the same elevation as the town’s water tower, he was faced with the problem of how to provide minimum water pressure mandated by the state. He had read about the use of a Goulds Aquavar pump control system in high-rise commercial buildings, and the idea of a variable-speed system appealed to him. He thought a pressure-demand system might do the job cost effectively.
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Feasibility Study Proposes Inflatable Dam
Water Engineering & Management
November 2001
By Garnet Daus
>The Wyoming Valley (Pa.) Inflatable Dam Feasibility Study recently received a National Honor Award in the studies, research and consulting engineering services category at the ACEC Engineering Excellence Awards Competition. The annual event celebrates engineering achievements that demonstrate the highest degree of merit and ingenuity.
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Fleet & Distribution Outsourcing
Water Quality Products
March 2001
Ralph K.F. Stockmayer, Penske Truck Leasing
There are many details to learn when outsourcing your vehicles. Discover how outsourcing can be the answer for you.
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Data Acquisition, Legacy Systems and Your Intranet
Water & Wastes Digest
February 2001
By Fred Noble
There are lots of parallels between the events of November 2000 and the events that take place in any factory or municipality that runs a process or monitors its effluent. The technology exists to achieve the much-talked-about six sigma (3.4 errors per million events) levels of measurement quality or process integrity. But antiquated legacy systems keep getting in the way. And, as is the case on the American political scene, it just is not that easy to replace those old methods of measuring things.
New Coating Technology Protects Underground Steel Tanks
Water & Wastes Digest
January 1998
Highland Tank, one of the founders of the Steel Tank Institute and a leading producer of underground protected steel storage tanks, has developed a new innovation in protective coating technology.
Understanding and Solving Fracture Flow Problems
Water Engineering & Management
September 1997
Dr. Thomas Doe
This article compares fracture flow with flow in more conventional porous systems and suggests solutions to fracture flow problems.
Blasting Alternative Removes Lead Paint, Renders Waste Non-hazardous
Water & Wastes Digest
January 1997
Some contractors and structure owners interested in safely removing lead paint are considering an alternative method. A blasting additive can be used with any non-recyclable abrasive to render lead or other heavy metal waste non-hazardous.
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