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Chemical Fate and Transport in the Environment

Chemical Fate and Transport in the Environment

Harold F. Hemond | Elizabeth J. Fechner

(1999)

Additional Information

Abstract

This newly updated and expanded edition of Chemical Fate and Transport in the Environment covers the fundamental principles of mass transport, chemical partitioning, and chemical/biological transformations in surface waters, in soil and groundwater, and in air. Each of these three major environmental media are introduced by descriptive overviews, followed by presentation of the controlling physical, chemical, and biological processes. The text
emphasizes intuitively based mathematical models for chemical transport and transformations in the environment, and serves both as a textbook for senior undergraduate and graduate courses in environmental science and engineering, and as a standard reference for environmental practitioners.

  • Provides an integrated coverage of major environmental media
  • Presents a quantitative treatment of fate and transport processes
  • Is based on a graduate-level course taught for 10 years at MIT, augmented with practical consulting experience
  • Features examples and illustrations throughout the text
  • Includes extensive exercises at the end of each chapter
  • Contains ample references to the primary literature

"...a succinct, yet substantive, review of chemical fate and transport processes in the environment... an excellent overview..."
- JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION
"...The strength of this book is the excellent quantitative approach that it presents to solving problems..."
- ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY