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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: EVE 402. An introduction to atmospheric chemical transformations; atomic structure and chemical bonding; thermodynamics, gas-phase kinetics, and photochemistry; tropospheric processes; stratospheric processes.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: EVE 290 and EVE 384. Analysis and design of wastewater treatment systems beginning with an overview of the sources of water pollution and discussion of wastewater characteristics. Fundamental theory and design of conventional wastewater treatment facilities is presented followed by the principles used to design advanced wastewater treatment facilities.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: EVE 290 and EVE 384. Analysis and design of water treatment systems beginning with an overview of the sources of water and discussion of water quality parameters. Fundamental theory and design of conventional water treatment facilities is presented followed by the principles used to design advanced water treatment facilities.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CHM 112 and EVE 290. Chemical, mechanical and biological equipment and instrumentation for the collection, processing and disposal of solid wastes are studied and designed. Federal, state, and local regulations regarding generation and disposal of wastes are covered. Handling and recycling of municipal wastes is emphasized.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: EVE 405. Introduction to the underlying microbial physiological/biochemical capabilities responsible for contaminant transformation, mathematical descriptions of biological processes, applications and limitations of microbial reactors, applications and limitations of in-situ bioremediation techniques currently used in field-scale remediation, and current and future directions of bioremediation research and field applications.
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1.00 Credits
Prerequisites: Senior standing; EVE 290L; EVE 405 and EVE 420. Corequisite: EVE 402. Laboratory investigation of unit operations and processes in environmental engineering: coagulation, flocculation, settling; biological treatment of wastewater; oxygen transfer kinetics; nitrogen analyses; beer's law; and off-gases analyses. Design, conduct, and analyze experiments using modern techniques, skills, and tools.
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0.00 Credits
Corequisites: TCO 341, EVE 405, and EVE 420. Course will provide guidance for the selection of team members and topic for the senior design project to be completed in EVE 487 and EVE 488. To successfully complete the course, a student must belong to a team (3 to 4 persons) and briefly outline the project goals to be implemented in EVE 487 and EVE 488. A seminar series will be conducted to facilitate student introduction to potential industrial clients and projects. Seminar attendance is required to obtain a satisfactory course grade. This course is graded S/U.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: Senior standing, EGR 252, EVE 405, and EVE 420. Corequisite: EVE 402. Public health engineering principles for protection against biological and chemical hazards. Introduction to toxicology and epidemiology. Basic risk assessment concepts as applied to water, airbourne, and toxic pollutants. Emphasis on major communicable diseases that plague mankind, organisms that cause them, routes of transmission, and engineering control methods. Appropriate control methods, for rural areas and developing countries.
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2.00 Credits
Prerequisites: TCO 341, EVE 405, EVE 420, and EVE 480. Must have completed all required 100- and 200-level engineering, mathematics, and science courses. Multi-disciplinary design projects with substantial EVE content. Small groups design, build, and test realistic engineering systems under faculty supervision. Projects include safety, economic, environmental, and ethical considerations and require written and oral projects.
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2.00 Credits
Prerequisite: EVE 487. Continuation of EVE 487 multi-disciplinary design projects with substantial EVE content. Small groups design, build, and test realistic engineering systems under faculty supervision. Projects include safety, economic, environmental, and ethical considerations and require written and oral reports.
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