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White Papers & Articles

Browse the library of white papers and industry articles authored by Hydro International's water experts.

For technical papers presented at industry conferences, please visit the Technical Papers Library. 

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file icon Stop Playing the FIeldhot! 08/01/2008

By Kwabena Osei, MsCE

In an industry where alternative sediment and nutrient removal practices are increasingly sought, it is imperative that engineers and regulators know precisely just how efficient various Best Management Practices (BMPs) are. For many years, field testing has been the preferred method for evaluating different structural stormwater treatment systems. However, many unsuccessful or inconclusive field testing exercises have been carried out on structural BMPs over the past few years leading scientists and engineers to conclude that field testing is fraught with many obstacles and challenges that are difficult to eliminate, as well as potentially producing results that are not necessarily representative of the performances of both proprietary and non-proprietary stormwater management practices.

file icon The Versatile Vortex Valvehot! 04/30/2009

By Robert Y.G. Andoh, Mike Faram and Dave Scott

Water industry officials throughout Europe – and in a growing number of municipalities in North America – tend to think of vortex valves as a novel technology for outlet flow control on a stormwater detention system. Most of these 17,000+ valves installed around the world are, in fact, implemented on stormwater detention schemes because use of a valve can reduce the required storage volume by up to 50% while still meeting the maximum discharge requirement. But vortex valves actually have many other uses in stormwater, wastewater and combined sewer systems. These versatile devices tackle a number of other problems, including erosion control, re-oxygenation of water and flow equalization in wastewater treatment plants.

file icon Time for Canada to Take the Plunge on Washouthot! 03/03/2008

By Dr. Bob Andoh

For years municipalities around the globe have invested in stormwater treatment systems to remove pollutants from runoff. Whether they are used for stand-alone treatment or as pretreatment devices to keep our infiltration bays from clogging, these “sedimentation devices” have an important role in stormwater treatment. Yet a troubling problem has emerged and become more apparent: many proprietary treatment systems don’t hold what they catch. When flows increase, previously captured pollutants can re-suspend and discharge right out of the system. Moreover, many communities are not aware of this phenomenon — known as “washout” — leaving them with a false sense of security about the ability to keep their waterways clean.

file icon Vortex Separators Can Reduce CSO Capital Expenditures 50%hot! 05/01/2009

By Prof. Bob Andoh

Current estimates of the costs required to address combined sewer overflow (CSO) problems are in the $50 billion range and rising. The majority of the cost is made up of chambers and other equipment required to separate solids and disinfect the much higher volume of stormwater-sewage mix that is generated during heavy rains. These estimated costs are based on the use of conventional technology, which requires relatively large sedimentation and contact tanks in order to achieve the level of solids separation or disinfection needed to meet applicable environmental regulations.

Hydrodynamic vortex separators (HDVSs) have been identified as a possible means of reducing the capital expenditures required to address CSOs. A key advantage is that a single HDVS is capable of both solids separation and disinfection, providing a significant reduction in the capital expenditures required to handle CSOs. Another advantage is that the flow properties of a single HDVS can be optimized to greatly improve the efficiency of both solids separation and contact disinfection compared to conventional technology. This means that HDVSs can handle the same CSO volume as conventional contact tanks that are 5 times larger. The resulting reduction in tank size and construction costs typically reduces overall project costs by about 50%.

file icon Vortex Valves: A Rising Trend in American Stormwater Managementhot! 06/02/2008

By Professor Robert Andoh

Burgeoning commercial and industrial development is putting increased pressure on drainage systems. Land and vegetation act as a natural filtration system during storms. The conversion of open space to impervious materials such as roads, buildings, and parking lots increases the volume of runoff and the risk of downstream flooding. Worse, too fast an influx of water into the drain overtaxes combined sewage systems, causing untreated sewage to spill out into waterways.

Until recently, most developers and municipalities in the U.S. relied on end-of-pipe solutions such as large detention tanks, deep tunnel storage systems, and high rate treatment facilities to combat urban flooding problems. However, these large, structurally intensive systems are extremely costly to purchase and to maintain.

To alleviate these challenges, many in the U.S. are now looking to an alternative approach long relied on in Europe and the U.K. More than 16,000 vortex flow controls, also known as vortex “valves”, are installed around the world to manage water flow in stormwater storage schemes, stormwater sewers, combined sewers and wastewater treatment plants. These novel devices are useful for many applications, including inlet control and stormwater storage.

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