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Department of Architecture & Civil Engineering, Unit Catalogue 2009/10


AR30344: Civil engineering hydraulics 2

Click here for further information Credits: 6
Click here for further information Level: Honours
Click here for further information Period: Semester 1
Click here for further information Assessment: EX 100%
Click here for further informationSupplementary Assessment: Like-for-like reassessment (where allowed by programme regulations)
Click here for further information Requisites: Before taking this unit you must take AR20241
Description: Aims:
To give students a knowledge and understanding of channel flow as applied to civil engineering structures; water engineering applied to coastal, estuary and river engineering; public health engineering related to water supply, drainage and treatment.

Learning Outcomes:
On successful completion of this unit, the student should be able to demonstrate knowledge and understanding of:
* design of a range of hydraulic structures.
* factors and relationships affecting groundwater, including replenishment, contamination and extraction.
* the main factors affecting the design of civil engineering works on coasts.
* factors influencing the design of hydro-electric and tidal power schemes.
* the main elements of water supply, sewage disposal, and surface water drainage systems.

Skills:
Intellectual skills
* Ability to apply the concepts and principles of fluid mechanics to the solution of engineering problems.
* To understand taught material and design issues and constraints.
Professional/Practical skills
* To deal with civil engineering hydraulic issues in a systematic yet creative way, and to communicate the conclusions clearly.
Transferable/key skills
* Ability to collect, analyse, synthesise and present technical information. To demonstrate communication and team working skills.

Content:
Hydraulic structures: dams, spillways, stilling basins, draw off towers, constant velocity channel, settlement tanks, flow dividers.
Water Engineering: Hydrology: hydrological cycle, meteorology, groundwater, surface run-off, analysis and forecasting.
Groundwater: wells, groundwater movement, groundwater contamination, dispersion and diffusion.
Coastal Engineering: Wave action, sediment transport, natural bays, defences and protection, coastal structures, wave power. River and canal engineering: optimum cross-section, unlined channels, alluvial channels, river modelling. Hydro-electric power, tidal power.
Public Health Engineering
Sanitation: Appliances, materials and components; sanitary incinerators and macerators; sanitary provision.
Discharge pipe systems, terminal velocities, pressure variations in stacks.
Water supply: sources of water, purity, hardness, water consumption, methods of treatment; corrosion, sludge, micro-organism control in water and steam systems, supply networks; supply installations, estimation of demand and sizing, simultaneous demand.
Drainage: foul and surface water drainage; materials and components; sizing and design; ventilation; sewage lifting.
Sewage disposal and drainage: water cycle, rainfall, run off, soak aways, sewerage systems, chemical and biological methods of treatment, small plants; problems with various effluents, septic tanks, disposal to rivers or sea outfalls.
Environmental risk assessment, pollution.
NB. Programmes and units are subject to change at any time, in accordance with normal University procedures.