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Gippsland Second semester 2007 (Day)
In this unit, the fundamental principles and concepts of chemistry studied in previous years will be related to the aquatic system. The chemical processes which occur in natural and modified systems will be examined with a particular view of understanding the nature, effects and fate of pollutants. Remediation methods to clean up polluted systems will be studied. Particular emphasis will be placed on the analysis of water, the effect of wastes on the quality of the environment and the maintenance of environmentally sustainable water supplies.
On completion of this unit students will be able to understand the different water cycles and water and wastewater management schemes understand different quality and quantity requirements of different users of water; understand the chemical principles involved in the purification of water for domestic and industrial use; understand the process of eutrophication and the factors that cause it; understand the nature, properties, effects and detection of toxic substances in the aquatic environment;experimentally measure the levels of chemical pollutants using modern analytical and monitoring methods; assess various processes to determine whether or not they are environmentally sustainable; ;recognise the principles involved in treating wastewater; suggest appropriate methods for remediation of wastewater streams; work effectively as a member of a team; show advanced report writing skills
Assignment work (5000 words): 30%
Practical work: 25%
Examination (3 hours): 45%
Three 1-hour lectures per week, 39 hours of laboratory per semester
CHM3727