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Evaporation, seepage and water quality management in storage dams: a review of research methods

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 07:38 authored by I Craig, V Aravinthan, C Baillie, A Beswick, G Barnes, R Bradbury, L Connal, P Cooper, C Fellows, L Fitzmaurice, J Foley, N Hancock, D Lamb, P Morrison, R Misra, R Mossad, P Pittaway, E Prime, S Rees, E Schmidt, D Solomon, T Symes, D Turnbull
One of the most significant sources of water wastage in Australia is loss from small storage dams, either by seepage or evaporation. Over much of Australia, evaporative demand routinely exceeds precipitation. This paper outlines first, methodologies and measurement techniques to quantify the rate of evaporative loss from fresh water storages. These encompass high-accuracy water balance monitoring; determination of the validity of alternative estimation equations, in particular the FAO56 Penman- Monteith ETo methodology; and the commencement of CFD modeling to determine a 'dam factor' in relation to practical atmospheric measurement techniques. Second, because the application of chemical monolayers is the only feasible alternative to the high cost of physically covering the storages to retard evaporation, the use of cetyl alcohol-based monolayers is reviewed, and preliminary research on their degradation by photolytic action, by wind break-up and by microbial degradation reported. Similarly, preliminary research on monolayer visualisation techniques for field application is reported; and potential enhancement of monolayers by other chemicals and attendant water quality issues are considered.

History

Journal

Environmental health

Volume

7

Pagination

84-97

Location

Fortitude Valley, Qld.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1444-5212

Language

eng

Publication classification

CN.1 Other journal article

Copyright notice

2007, Australian Institute of Environmental Health

Issue

3

Publisher

Australian Institute of Environmental Health

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