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Nov 15, 2004

Marine Wastewater Discharges from Multiport Diffusers. II: Unstratified Flowing Water

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Publication: Journal of Hydraulic Engineering
Volume 130, Issue 12

Abstract

Laboratory experiments on the near-field mixing of buoyant plumes discharged from multiport diffusers into unstratified flowing water are reported. The spatial variation of dilution was measured by a newly developed three-dimensional laser-induced fluorescence system and a microconductivity probe. The near-field hydrodynamics are complex. The plumes discharged upstream dilute and merge more rapidly than those discharged downstream. Even with wide port spacing, the plumes eventually merge to form a laterally uniform surface wastefield. The density profile in this wastefield becomes gravitationally stable and suppresses mixing, marking the end of the near field. The value of the port spacing ratio, s/H, below which the discharge approximates a line plume is greater for discharge into a flowing current than into a stationary environment, so the port spacing plays a lesser role in a flowing current. The mixing and dilution that occurs in the surface layer is less than for a discharge into a stationary environment, and it decreases as the current speed increases. Semiempirical equations to predict the major near field characteristics are presented.

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References

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Go to Journal of Hydraulic Engineering
Journal of Hydraulic Engineering
Volume 130Issue 12December 2004
Pages: 1147 - 1155

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Published online: Nov 15, 2004
Published in print: Dec 2004

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Authors

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Xiaodong Tian, A.M.ASCE
Postdoctoral Researcher, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, 30332.
Philip J. W. Roberts, F.ASCE
Professor, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, 30332.
Gregory J. Daviero, A.M.ASCE
Malcolm Pirnie, Inc., 104 Corporate Park Dr., White Plains, NY 10602-0751

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