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Environmental Engineering – Complete Study Notes

GATE ESE / IES SSC JE State PSC RRB JE

Comprehensive chapter-wise notes on Water Supply Engineering, Waste Water Engineering, Solid Waste Management, and Air & Noise Pollution. Covers all IS codes (IS 10500, IS 2470, CPCB norms), design formulae, treatment processes, diagrams, and exam-focused tables for GATE, ESE & SSC JE.

Ch 1 · Water Demand Ch 2 · Water Conduits Ch 3 · Ground Water & Wells Ch 4 · Water Quality Ch 5 · Water Treatment Ch 6 · Sewer Design Ch 7 · Sewage Quality Ch 8 · Sewage Disposal Ch 9 · Sewage Treatment Ch 10 · Air & Noise Pollution ★ Solid Waste & Quick Revision
1Water Demand

1.1 Sources of Water

Source TypeExamplesQualitySuitability
Surface waterRivers, lakes, tanks, reservoirsVariable; turbid, may have bacteriaLarge cities after treatment; cheapest to develop
Ground waterWells, springs, infiltration galleries, tube wellsGenerally better; may have hardness, ironRural and small towns; often requires only disinfection
Rainwater / Rooftop harvestingRoof collection, check damsGenerally clean initiallySupplementary; arid zones
Sea water (desalination)SWRO, MSF plantsHigh TDS (35,000 mg/L)Coastal cities; expensive

1.2 Types and Per Capita Demand

Type of UseIS 1172 Per Capita (lpcd)Remarks
Domestic135 lpcd (cities >1 lakh)Drinking, cooking, bathing, flushing; 70% is indoor
Industrial50 lpcd (allowance)Highly variable; 45–450 kL/tonne of product
Commercial / Institutional20 lpcdHotels, hospitals, offices, schools
Fire demandAs per Kuichling's formulaNot added to average; governs pipe sizing at hydrants
Losses / Thefts15% of totalLeakage, metering error, illegal use
Total design170–200 lpcd (urban India)Sum of above with safety factor

1.3 Factors Affecting Water Demand

  • Population size: Larger cities → higher per capita demand (more commercial, industrial use)
  • Climate: Hot and dry → more demand; cold regions → less bathing
  • Living standards: Higher income → more water-using appliances
  • Metering: Metered supply reduces consumption by 20–25% (accounts for waste)
  • Pressure: Higher pressure in mains → more losses through leakages
  • Quality: Poor quality → less willingness to use domestically
  • System efficiency: Old pipes → more leakage losses

1.4 Variation in Demand — Peak Factors

Average Daily Demand (ADD) = Annual consumption / 365

Maximum Daily Demand (MDD) = 1.8 × ADD
Maximum Hourly Demand (MHD) = 1.5 × MDD = 2.7 × ADD
Minimum Hourly Demand = 0.5 × ADD

Peak factor = MHD / ADD = 2.7
(IS 1172 values; some references use 1.5–2.0 for MDD and 2.5–3.0 for MHD)

1.5 Design Period and Population Forecasting

Design period: 30 years for dams, 15–20 years for treatment plants, 10 years for distribution

Arithmetic growth: P_n = P_0 + n × r (r = average annual increment)

Geometric growth: P_n = P_0 × (1 + r/100)^n [r = % growth rate]

Incremental increase method:
Average increment = Σ(increment per decade) / no. of decades
Average incremental increase = Σ(change in increment) / (no. of decades − 1)
P_n = P_last + n/10 × avg_increment + n(n+1)/20 × avg_incr_increase

Logistic (S-curve): P = P_s / (1 + m × e^(−kn))
P_s = saturation population; used when growth is expected to stabilize

1.6 Fire Demand Formulae

Kuichling's formula: Q = 3182 × √P (Q in litres/min, P in thousands)
Freeman's formula: Q = 1136 × (P/5 + 10) / 10
IS formula: Q = 100√P (Q in m³/hr, P in thousands)

Duration of fire fighting: 4–8 hours for most cities (IS 3764)
Pressure at fire hydrant: minimum 7 m head residual
📝 GATE Tip: Per capita demand = 135 lpcd (domestic), Total design ≈ 200 lpcd. Peak factors: MDD = 1.8× ADD; MHD = 2.7× ADD. These specific numbers appear in almost every GATE environmental question on water demand.
2Conduits for Transporting Water

2.1 Pipe Flow — Manning's and Hazen-Williams Equations

Manning's equation (gravity flow):
V = (1/n) × R^(2/3) × S^(1/2)
Q = A × V = (A/n) × R^(2/3) × S^(1/2)
R = A/P (hydraulic radius); S = slope of hydraulic gradient; n = Manning's roughness

n values: CI pipe = 0.012–0.014; PVC = 0.009–0.011; concrete = 0.013–0.015

Hazen-Williams (pressurised water distribution):
V = 0.8492 × C × R^0.63 × S^0.54 (V in m/s, R in m)
Q = 0.2785 × C × D^2.63 × S^0.54
C = Hazen-Williams coefficient: CI new = 130; old CI = 100; steel = 120; PVC = 140–150

Darcy-Weisbach (head loss):
h_f = f × L × V² / (2gD)
f = friction factor (from Moody chart); typical 0.01–0.05

2.2 Pipe Materials for Water Supply

MaterialAdvantagesDisadvantagesUse
Cast Iron (CI)Strong, long life, joints easyHeavy, brittle, corrodes over timeDistribution mains; 75–600 mm dia
Ductile Iron (DI)Strong + ductile; better than CIExpensiveModern distribution; replacing CI
Steel (MS)Light, strong, any sizeCorrodes; needs lining or coatingTransmission mains; large dia
PVC / CPVCLight, corrosion-proof, cheapLimited temperature/pressure rangeSmall dia distribution; house connections
HDPEFlexible, good chemical resistanceUV degradation if exposedRural supply; sliplined rehabilitation
Asbestos Cement (AC)Smooth, light, cheapBrittle; health concerns (asbestos)Now largely phased out
Pre-stressed ConcreteLarge dia; suitable for gravity mainsHeavy; joints criticalLarge transmission mains >600 mm

2.3 Distribution System Layout

Tree / Dead-End System Dead ends → stagnation, sediment ✗ Pressure fails during fire/burst ✓ Simple; cheap; rural areas Ring / Grid System ✓ Flow from multiple directions ✓ No stagnation; reliable supply ✗ Costly; complex analysis (Hardy-Cross) Radial / Circular System: City divided into zones; each zone has a circular main; water supplied from centre. Advantages: uniform pressure; easy detection of failures; used in planned cities.
Fig. 2.1 — Distribution layouts: Tree system (dead-ends; simple, unreliable) vs Ring/Grid system (interconnected; reliable; used in cities)

2.4 Hardy-Cross Method for Pipe Network Analysis

Hardy-Cross iterative method for looped networks:
Head loss in pipe: h_f = r × Q^n (r = pipe resistance; n = 1.85 for HW, 2 for DW)

Correction factor for flow in each loop:
ΔQ = −ΣhL / (n × Σ|hL/Q|)
= −Σ(rQ|Q|^(n-1)) / (n × Σr|Q|^(n-1))

Convergence criterion: ΔQ < 0.001 m³/s (or any small tolerance)

Procedure:
1. Assume flows Q in each pipe satisfying continuity at each junction
2. Compute h_f = r·Q|Q| in each pipe; assign sign by flow direction convention
3. Compute ΔQ for each loop; update flows: Q_new = Q_old + ΔQ
4. Repeat until convergence (typically 3–5 iterations)

2.5 Service Reservoir (Storage)

Storage capacity = balancing storage + fire reserve + emergency reserve

Balancing storage: 1/3 of daily demand (from demand–supply fluctuation curves)
Fire reserve: 4 hours of fire demand at hydrant
Emergency/breakdown reserve: 25% of daily demand

Elevated storage tank height:
Provides pressure head; minimum 7 m residual at consumer's tap
Tank bottom elevation = service area highest ground + 7 m + pipe friction losses
📝 GATE Tip: Hazen-Williams C: CI (new)=130, old CI=100, PVC=140–150. Hardy-Cross ΔQ = −Σh_L / (n·Σ|h_L/Q|). Balancing storage = 1/3 of daily demand. These are the three most tested facts in this chapter.
3Ground Water Development & Well Hydraulics

3.1 Types of Aquifers

Aquifer TypeDescriptionWater TableExample
Unconfined (phreatic)Water table exposed to atmosphere; water table is upper boundaryVaries freely with seasonsAlluvial plains; dug wells
Confined (artesian)Sandwiched between impervious layers; water under pressurePiezometric surface > top of aquiferDeep tube wells; artesian wells
Semi-confined (leaky)Confining layer is semi-permeable; leakage from adjacent aquiferPiezometric varies with leakageAlluvial basins with clay lenses
Perched aquiferLocal impervious lens above main water tableLocalised; above regional WTHillside springs; seasonal

3.2 Darcy's Law

Q = K × i × A
where K = hydraulic conductivity (m/day or m/s)
i = hydraulic gradient = dh/dL
A = cross-sectional area normal to flow

Validity: Laminar flow (Re = V×d_50/ν < 1–10)
Not valid for gravel/rock (high velocities, turbulent flow)

Intrinsic permeability: k_i = K × μ / (ρg) [depends on pore structure only]

3.3 Well Hydraulics — Steady State

Static WT Pumped water level H H h_w R (radius of influence) pump
Fig. 3.1 — Unconfined well: cone of depression; R = radius of influence; H = undisturbed head
Impervious cap (confining layer) Impervious base Confined Aquifer thickness b Piezometric level b pump Theis/Theim eqn Q=2πKb(H-h)/ln(R/r)
Fig. 3.2 — Confined (artesian) well: piezometric surface above aquifer top; flow equation uses aquifer thickness b

3.4 Well Discharge Equations

UNCONFINED WELL (Dupuit-Thiem, steady state):
Q = π × K × (H² − h²) / ln(R/r_w)

Where: H = undisturbed water table height above impermeable base
h = water level in well during pumping
r_w = well radius; R = radius of influence (Sichardt: R = 3000×(H−h)×√K)
K = hydraulic conductivity (m/s or m/day)

CONFINED WELL (Thiem, steady state):
Q = 2π × K × b × (H − h) / ln(R/r_w)
= 2π × T × (H − h) / ln(R/r_w)
T = transmissivity = K × b (m²/day)

Between two observation wells at r₁ and r₂ (confined):
Q = 2π × T × (h₂ − h₁) / ln(r₂/r₁)

3.5 Transient Well Flow — Theis Method

Theis equation (unsteady confined well):
s = Q / (4πT) × W(u) [s = drawdown = H − h]
u = r² × S / (4Tt)

W(u) = well function = −Ei(−u) = −0.5772 − ln(u) + u − u²/2! + u³/3! ...
S = storage coefficient (dimensionless)
t = time since pumping started

For small u (u < 0.05) — Cooper-Jacob approximation:
s = Q / (4πT) × [−0.5772 − ln(u)]
= 2.303Q / (4πT) × log(2.25Tt / r²S)

3.6 Types of Wells

Well TypeDepthDiaMethodYield
Open / Dug well10–20 m1–6 mManual/mechanical excavationLow; 50–500 L/hr
Tube well (deep)60–300 m100–450 mmRotary/cable tool drillingHigh; 100–3000 m³/day
Infiltration gallery5–10 mHorizontal perforated pipe near riverbankMedium; induced recharge
Spring collectionAt surfaceGravity collection of natural springVariable; gravity-fed
Collector (Ranney) well15–30 mLarge caissonRadial horizontal lateralsVery high; 1000–50,000 m³/day
📝 GATE Tip: Unconfined: Q = πK(H²−h²)/ln(R/r_w). Confined: Q = 2πKb(H−h)/ln(R/r_w). Transmissivity T = Kb (m²/day). Radius of influence R = 3000(H−h)√K (Sichardt). These equations appear every year.
4Quality Control of Water Supplies

4.1 Physical Characteristics

ParameterUnitPermissible (IS 10500)DesirableTest Method
TurbidityNTU5 NTU<1 NTUNephelometer; Jackson turbidimeter
ColourHazen units15 HU5 HUVisual comparison; spectrophotometer
Taste & OdourTON (threshold)UnobjectionableDilution-to-threshold method
Temperature°C10–25°C (max 45°C)10–20°CThermometer
Total Dissolved Solids (TDS)mg/L500 mg/LGravimetric (105°C evaporation)

4.2 Chemical Characteristics

ParameterPermissible Limit (IS 10500:2012)Health Effect if Exceeded
pH6.5 – 8.5Corrosion (<6.5); scaling (>8.5)
Total Hardness300 mg/L (max 600)Scale in pipes/boilers; soap wastage; not harmful directly
Fluoride1.0 mg/L (max 1.5)Dental fluorosis >1.5; skeletal fluorosis >3–6
Nitrate (as NO₃)45 mg/LMethaemoglobinaemia (blue baby syndrome) in infants
Arsenic0.01 mg/LSkin cancer, arsenicosis (chronic); WHO 0.01 mg/L
Iron0.3 mg/LStaining, taste; no direct health effect at low levels
Chloride250 mg/L (max 1000)Salty taste; corrosion of pipes
Chlorine (residual)0.2 mg/L (min)Below → bacterial growth; above 0.5 → taste/odour
Sulphate200 mg/L (max 400)Laxative effect; concrete attack
Lead0.01 mg/LNeurotoxin; cumulative; children most vulnerable

4.3 Biological Characteristics

Coliform organisms — indicator bacteria (Escherichia coli as index):
IS 10500: No coliform in 100 mL of treated water (MPN = 0)
Source water (untreated): MPN ≤ 10/100 mL permissible for surface source

MPN (Most Probable Number): statistical method using multiple dilution tube test
MPN index gives probable number of coliforms per 100 mL from positive/negative results

Membrane Filter (MF) technique: filter 100 mL; incubate on selective media 37°C for 24 hr;
count colonies → coliform count per 100 mL

Bacteria: Total Plate Count (TPC) at 37°C: < 100 colonies/mL for treated water

4.4 Hardness of Water

Temporary hardness (carbonate): Ca(HCO₃)₂, Mg(HCO₃)₂ → removed by boiling
Permanent hardness (non-carbonate): CaSO₄, MgSO₄, CaCl₂ → NOT removed by boiling
Total hardness = temporary + permanent

Expressed as mg/L of CaCO₃ equivalent:
Hardness (as CaCO₃) = ion concentration (mg/L) × (50 / eq. weight of ion)
Ca²⁺: eq. wt = 20; Mg²⁺: eq. wt = 12; HCO₃⁻: eq. wt = 61

Langelier Saturation Index (LSI): Indicates corrosiveness or scaling tendency
LSI = pH_actual − pH_s
LSI > 0 → scaling tendency; LSI < 0 → corrosive; LSI = 0 → stable

4.5 Chlorine Demand and Breakpoint Chlorination

Chlorine demand = chlorine added − residual chlorine

Breakpoint chlorination:
Phase 1 (0 to ~1.5× NH₃): chloramines form; residual rises slowly
Phase 2 (dip — breakpoint): chloramines destroyed; chlorine demand high; residual drops
Phase 3 (beyond breakpoint): free residual chlorine increases linearly with dose

Breakpoint dose ≈ 7.6 × (NH₃-N concentration)
Beyond breakpoint: 0.2 mg/L free residual Cl₂ must remain at consumer tap

Superchlorination: adding very high doses; followed by dechlorination with SO₂ or activated C
⭐ IS 10500:2012 Key Limits: Turbidity ≤ 5 NTU; TDS ≤ 500 mg/L; Hardness ≤ 300 mg/L; pH 6.5–8.5; Fluoride ≤ 1.0 mg/L; Nitrate ≤ 45 mg/L; Arsenic ≤ 0.01 mg/L; Coliforms = 0 per 100 mL (treated water). Memorise these for GATE.
5Water Treatment & Distribution System

5.1 Flow Chart of Water Treatment Plant

Screening & Intake Aeration (optional) Coagulation & Floccu. Sediment- ation Filtration (RSF/SSF) Disinfection (Chlorine) Storage & Distrib. Source (River/Lake/GW)
Fig. 5.1 — Water treatment plant flow sequence: Screening → Aeration → Coagulation/Flocculation → Sedimentation → Filtration → Disinfection → Distribution

5.2 Aeration

Removes dissolved gases (CO₂, H₂S, volatile organics), oxidises Fe²⁺ and Mn²⁺ (to Fe³⁺ and MnO₂ for removal in subsequent sedimentation), and reduces taste and odour.

  • Spray aerator: Nozzles spray water into air; simple; effective for taste/odour
  • Cascade aerator: Water flows over stepped weirs; increases DO; removes CO₂
  • Diffused air aerator: Air bubbled through water; used in activated sludge process also
  • Packed tower aerator: Counter-current air flow; most efficient for VOC removal

5.3 Coagulation and Flocculation

Purpose: Destabilise colloidal particles (–ve charged; 1–1000 nm) by adding coagulant

Common coagulants:
Alum: Al₂(SO₄)₃·18H₂O → Al(OH)₃ (gelatinous floc) + H₂SO₄
Optimal pH for alum: 6.5–7.5 (Al(OH)₃ least soluble)

Ferric sulphate: Fe₂(SO₄)₃ → Fe(OH)₃; better at low pH and low temp than alum
Ferric chloride: FeCl₃; fast settling; pH range 5–9
Lime (CaO): raises pH; precipitates Mg(OH)₂; removes hardness

Jar test: laboratory determination of optimum coagulant dose and pH

Flocculation: gentle agitation to aggregate micro-flocs into settle-able macro-flocs
G×t product (Camp number): 10⁴–10⁵ for flocculation (G = velocity gradient, t = detention time)
G = √(P / μV); P = power input, μ = dynamic viscosity, V = volume of tank

5.4 Sedimentation Tanks

Overflow rate (surface loading rate): q_s = Q / A_s
Particle removal: all particles with v_s > q_s are removed; fraction q_s/v_s for smaller particles

For plain sedimentation (no coagulation): q_s = 12,000–18,000 L/m²/day
For coagulation-sedimentation: q_s = 30,000–40,000 L/m²/day (heavier floc)

Horizontal velocity: v_h = Q / (W × D)
Detention time: t = V/Q = L×W×D/Q (typically 2–4 hours)

Weir loading: Q / (total weir length) ≤ 300 m³/m/day (prevents resuspension at outlet)

Stokes' law settling velocity:
v_s = g(ρ_s − ρ_w)d² / (18μ)
ρ_s = particle density, d = particle dia, μ = dynamic viscosity

5.5 Filtration

ParameterSlow Sand Filter (SSF)Rapid Sand Filter (RSF)
Filtration rate0.1–0.4 m/hr (0.1–0.2 usual)4–12 m/hr (5 m/hr typical)
MediaSand (0.15–0.35 mm, UC<2)Sand (0.45–0.70 mm) on gravel
Schmutzdecke (biofilm)Critical; biological action; vitalNot present; purely physical
Turbidity of influent≤5 NTU (needs pre-treatment if higher)Can handle higher (after coagulation)
BackwashScraping and washing; 1–2 monthsBackwashing every 24–72 hrs (upward flow)
Area neededVery large (low rate)Much smaller
CostLow operating; high land costHigh capital (coagulation needed); lower land
Coliform removal98–99%Lower; relies on disinfection
RSF Design (IS 4090):
Filtration rate: 5 m/hr (range 4–6 m/hr)
Sand depth: 600–900 mm (effective size 0.45–0.70 mm, uniformity coefficient <1.7)
Gravel support: 450–600 mm (graduated; 5 mm to 50 mm from top to bottom)
Backwash rate: 12–15 m/hr; duration 5–10 minutes
Expansion during backwash: 25–50% of sand bed depth

5.6 Disinfection

Chlorination (most common): Cl₂ gas; NaOCl solution; Ca(OCl)₂ (bleaching powder)
Hypochlorite of lime (bleaching powder): 25–35% available chlorine

Chick's law (disinfection kinetics): dN/dt = −k × N
N = N₀ × e^(−kt) [N = surviving organisms, k = rate constant, t = contact time]

CT concept: C × t = constant for a given log inactivation
C = disinfectant concentration (mg/L), t = contact time (min)

Free residual Cl₂ at tap: minimum 0.2 mg/L (IS 10500)
Ct value for 99% removal of Giardia cysts: ~80–100 mg·min/L for free Cl₂ at 10°C

Ozonation: powerful oxidant; no residual; used in advanced treatment
UV disinfection: effective; no chemicals; no residual (must be combined with Cl₂)
Chloramine (Cl₂ + NH₃): slower acting but more stable residual; less THM formation
📝 GATE/ESE Tip: SSF rate = 0.1–0.4 m/hr; RSF = 4–12 m/hr. Alum optimal pH = 6.5–7.5. Overflow rate for plain sedimentation = 12,000–18,000 L/m²/day; after coagulation = 30,000–40,000. Chick's law: first-order die-off. These are classic question areas.
6Design of Sewer

6.1 Sewerage Systems — Types

SystemDescriptionAdvantageUse
Separate systemTwo separate pipes: one for sewage, one for storm waterSmaller sewage treatment plant; no dilutionNew planned developments; most modern systems
Combined systemSingle pipe carries both sewage and storm waterLower initial cost; single networkOld cities; can cause overflow in heavy rain
Partially separateSome storm water (from roofs) enters sewerCompromise; reduces surchargeOlder cities modifying to separate

6.2 Quantity of Sewage

Dry Weather Flow (DWF): sewage from domestic/industrial use (no rain)
DWF ≈ 80% of water supply (return flow fraction = 0.7–0.8)

Peak flow factor: DWF × 3 (for small sewers); DWF × 2 (for large interceptors)
Minimum flow: 1/3 × DWF (for self-cleansing velocity check)

Estimation:
Q_sewage = (80/100) × Q_water_supply
Q_water = 200 lpcd × population
Q_sewage = 160 lpcd × population (dry weather average)

Storm water (rational method):
Q_storm = C × I × A / 360 (Q in m³/s, I in mm/hr, A in hectares)
C = runoff coefficient (0.1 for parks, 0.9 for paved areas)

6.3 Sewer Hydraulics — Design

Manning's equation for sewer pipe:
V = (1/n) × R^(2/3) × S^(1/2)
Q = (A/n) × R^(2/3) × S^(1/2)

n = 0.013 (RCC sewer); 0.011 (glazed stoneware); 0.009 (PVC)

Self-cleansing velocity: minimum V to prevent sedimentation
V_min = 0.6–0.9 m/s (at full flow or 2/3 full); IS recommends 0.75 m/s at design flow
V_max = 3.0 m/s (to prevent erosion/abrasion of sewer lining)

For circular pipe RUNNING FULL:
R = D/4 A = πD²/4
V_full = (1/n)(D/4)^(2/3) × S^(1/2)
Q_full = (π/4)D² × V_full

Maximum discharge in circular pipe: at 0.94 D depth (not full!)
Maximum velocity in circular pipe: at 0.81 D depth

6.4 Hydraulic Elements — Circular Pipe

D d (depth) Hydraulic Elements vs d/D d/D → ↑ Q/Qf Q/Q_full V/V_full Q_max at d/D=0.94 V_max at d/D=0.81 0 0.5 1.0 0 0.5 1.08
Fig. 6.1 — Hydraulic elements of circular pipe: Q_max occurs at 94% full depth (Q = 1.08 Q_full); V_max at 81% depth. Design so that peak flow ≤ Q_max.

6.5 Sewer Appurtenances

AppurtenancePurposeSpacing / Size
ManholeAccess for inspection, cleaning, roddingEvery 30–50 m on straight; at every change of direction, dia, gradient; junction
Drop connectionHouse drain enters sewer at much higher elevationWhen incoming pipe invert is >0.6 m above sewer invert
Flushing tankPeriodic flushing of flat-gradient small sewersSelf-priming; at dead ends; automatic
Catch basinTrap grit and floating material from storm drainsAt road inlets; prevents grit entering sewer
Inverted siphonCarries sewage under an obstruction (road, river) under pressureVelocity ≥ 1.0 m/s to prevent deposition; minimum 2 barrels
Ventilation shaftReleases sewer gases; prevents septic conditionsAt every 150–300 m; at siphon ends
📝 GATE Tip: Self-cleansing velocity = 0.75 m/s (IS). Max velocity = 3.0 m/s (erosion limit). Q_max for circular pipe = 1.08 × Q_full at d/D = 0.94. Manhole spacing: 30–50 m on straight runs. Inverted siphon velocity ≥ 1.0 m/s. These are core design facts.
7Quality & Characteristics of Sewage

7.1 Composition of Domestic Sewage

Sewage is approximately 99.9% water and 0.1% solids (dissolved, suspended, colloidal). The solids include organic matter, inorganic salts, and microorganisms.

ParameterTypical RangeSignificance
BOD₅ (5-day BOD at 20°C)150–300 mg/LOrganic pollution indicator; O₂ demand for biodegradation
COD (Chemical Oxygen Demand)250–600 mg/LTotal oxidisable matter (biodegradable + non-biodeg.); COD > BOD always
Suspended Solids (SS)100–350 mg/LSettles; causes sludge; reduces clarity
Dissolved Oxygen (DO)0–1 mg/L (septic)Low/zero DO → anaerobic decomposition; H₂S odour
pH6.5–8.0 (fresh); acidic when septicControls biological treatment
Nitrogen (total)20–85 mg/L as NNutrient; causes eutrophication; TKN + NO₃-N
Phosphorus4–15 mg/L as PNutrient for algae; eutrophication
Coliforms (MPN)10⁶–10⁹/100 mLPathogen indicator; faecal contamination

7.2 BOD — Biochemical Oxygen Demand

First-order BOD kinetics:
BOD_t = L₀ × (1 − e^(−k_d × t))
where L₀ = ultimate BOD (BOD_u), k_d = deoxygenation rate constant (day⁻¹), t = time (days)

Temperature correction:
k_d(T) = k_d(20°C) × θ^(T−20) θ = 1.047 (Streeter-Phelps)

Typical values:
k_d at 20°C ≈ 0.1–0.15 day⁻¹ (base-10), 0.23 day⁻¹ (base-e) for domestic sewage
BOD₅/BOD_u ≈ 0.65–0.75 (i.e., 5-day BOD is 65–75% of ultimate)
COD/BOD₅ ratio ≈ 1.5–2.5 for domestic sewage; > 2.5 suggests non-biodegradable waste

7.3 Dissolved Oxygen and Streeter-Phelps Equation

Oxygen sag curve (river below sewage discharge):
D_t = k_d × L₀ / (k_r − k_d) × (e^(−k_d × t) − e^(−k_r × t)) + D₀ × e^(−k_r × t)

D_t = dissolved oxygen deficit at time t (= DO_sat − DO_actual)
D₀ = initial deficit; k_r = re-aeration rate constant (day⁻¹); k_d = deoxygenation constant
L₀ = initial BOD of mixed stream

Critical point (minimum DO = maximum deficit):
t_c = 1/(k_r − k_d) × ln[(k_r/k_d) × (1 − D₀(k_r − k_d)/(k_d × L₀))]
D_c = (k_d/k_r) × L₀ × e^(−k_d × t_c)

DO_sat at 20°C = 9.08 mg/L; at 25°C = 8.26 mg/L (decreases with temperature)
Distance / Time → DO DO_saturation Sewage outfall D_c (max deficit) Critical point t_c Recovery Clean zone Degradation→ →Recovery zone DO_min
Fig. 7.1 — Streeter-Phelps DO Sag Curve: DO drops to minimum (D_c) at critical point; recovers downstream as re-aeration exceeds de-oxygenation

7.4 Sludge Volume Index (SVI)

SVI = Volume of settled sludge (mL/L after 30 min) / MLSS (mg/L) × 1000

Good settling sludge: SVI = 80–120 mL/g
Bulking sludge: SVI > 200 mL/g (filamentous bacteria; poor settleability)

Sludge Density Index (SDI) = 100/SVI
Food to Microorganism ratio (F/M):
F/M = BOD input / (MLVSS × aeration volume) [day⁻¹]
Extended aeration: F/M = 0.05–0.15; Conventional: F/M = 0.2–0.4
8Disposing of the Sewage Effluents

8.1 Land Disposal Methods

MethodDescriptionBOD RemovalBest for
Irrigation (Land treatment)Sewage applied to agricultural land; plants uptake nutrients85–95%Nutrient-rich effluent; agriculture
Rapid infiltrationHigh rate loading in basins; percolates through soil90–99%Recharge of groundwater
Overland flowSheet flow over grass terraces; collected in drain80–90%Slow-draining soils
Subsurface applicationTile drains or absorption trenches90–99%Small installations; septic tanks

8.2 Dilution and Self-Purification in Rivers

Dilution factor: D = (Q_river + Q_sewage) / Q_sewage

Conditions for safe dilution in rivers (IS 2306):
For pathogenic safety: minimum dilution of 1:20 (1 part sewage : 20 parts river)
For DO maintenance: outfall must not reduce river DO below 4 mg/L

Self-purification processes:
1. Dilution: physical mixing reduces concentration
2. Sedimentation: settleable solids deposit
3. Oxidation: aerobic bacteria oxidise organic matter
4. Sunlight: UV kills pathogens (photo-oxidation)
5. Re-aeration: atmospheric O₂ dissolves into water

8.3 Septic Tank Design

Septic tank: two-stage (anaerobic + clarification) underground tank for individual dwellings

Minimum capacity (IS 2470):
For 1–5 users: 1000 litres
For each additional user beyond 5: add 180 litres

Liquid detention time: 24 hours minimum
L:B:D ratio = 2:1:1 to 4:1:1 (L = length, B = width, D = depth ≥ 1.0 m)

Followed by: soak pit or absorption trench (subsurface percolation)
Soak pit dia: 900–2400 mm; depth 1.5–4 m; percolation test required

Sludge: requires desludging every 1–3 years

8.4 Wastewater Irrigation Standards (IS 11624)

Treated wastewater for unrestricted irrigation: BOD ≤ 10 mg/L; SS ≤ 20 mg/L; Coliforms ≤ 1000/100 mL
Restricted irrigation (non-food crops): BOD ≤ 30 mg/L; Coliforms ≤ 10⁵/100 mL
Treated effluent standards for discharge to land (CPCB): BOD ≤ 30 mg/L; SS ≤ 100 mg/L
Discharge to inland surface water (CPCB): BOD ≤ 30 mg/L; SS ≤ 100 mg/L; pH 5.5–9; NH₃-N ≤ 50 mg/L
9Treatment of Sewage (Waste Water Treatment)

9.1 Levels of Sewage Treatment

LevelProcessesBOD RemovalSS Removal
PreliminaryScreening, grit removal, comminution5–10%5–10%
PrimaryPlain sedimentation; skimming of floatables25–40%50–70%
Secondary (biological)Activated sludge; trickling filter; waste stabilisation pond80–95%80–95%
Tertiary (advanced)Nutrient removal (N, P); MF/UF; RO; disinfection>95%>95%

9.2 Activated Sludge Process (ASP)

Primary Clarifier Aeration Tank (activated sludge + sewage + air blowers) Secondary Clarifier (SST) Treated Effluent Return Activated Sludge (RAS) 25–100% of Q Waste Sludge (WAS) Primary sludge Raw sewage
Fig. 9.1 — Activated Sludge Process: raw sewage → Primary clarifier → Aeration tank (biomass + air) → Secondary clarifier → treated effluent; return activated sludge (RAS) maintains MLSS in aeration tank
Key ASP design parameters:
MLSS (Mixed Liquor Suspended Solids): 2000–4000 mg/L (conventional)
MLVSS = 0.7–0.8 × MLSS (volatile fraction = active biomass)
Sludge Retention Time (SRT / θ_c): 5–15 days (conventional); 20–30 days (extended aeration)
HRT (Hydraulic Retention Time): 4–8 hours (conventional aeration tank)
F/M ratio = BOD_in / (MLVSS × HRT): 0.2–0.5 kg BOD/kg MLVSS/day

BOD removal: 85–95%
Sludge production: 0.5–0.8 kg VSS / kg BOD removed
Air requirement: 7–20 m³ air per m³ sewage (diffused aeration)

9.3 Trickling Filter (Biological Filter)

Media: crushed stone, plastic (random pack, structured); dia 25–100 mm
Depth: 1.5–3 m (conventional); up to 6 m (tower filter)
Hydraulic loading: 1–4 m³/m²/day (low rate); 4–40 m³/m²/day (high rate)
BOD loading: <0.08 kg/m³/day (low); 0.24–0.48 kg/m³/day (high rate)

NRC formula for BOD removal (low rate trickling filter):
E = 1 / [1 + 0.4432 × √(BOD / (V × F))]
E = BOD removal fraction; V = volume (10³ m³); F = recirculation factor
F = (1 + R) / (1 + R/10)² (R = recirculation ratio)

Types: Low-rate (stone media, 0.6–1.2 m/day HR); High-rate; Tower filter; Plastic media

9.4 Waste Stabilisation Ponds (WSP)

Pond TypeDODepthHRTBOD LoadingRemoval
Anaerobic pondZero2–5 m5–30 days100–300 g/m²/day50–70% BOD
Facultative pondAerobic top; anaerobic bottom1–2 m5–30 days100–350 kg/ha/day70–90% BOD
Maturation pondAerobic throughout0.5–1.5 m5–10 daysLowPathogen removal (log reduction)

9.5 Sludge Treatment and Management

Sludge thickening → Digestion → Dewatering → Disposal/Reuse

Anaerobic Digestion:
- Stage 1: Hydrolysis + Acidogenesis (acidogenic bacteria produce VFAs)
- Stage 2: Methanogenesis (methanogens convert VFAs to CH₄ + CO₂)
- Biogas: 60–70% CH₄, 30–40% CO₂; energy value ~22 MJ/m³
- Gas production: 0.5–1.0 m³ per kg VS destroyed
- Optimal temperature: 35°C (mesophilic); 55°C (thermophilic)
- SRT for mesophilic digestion: 20–30 days
- VS destruction: 50–60%

Dewatering methods:
Sludge drying beds: area = (V_sludge) / (4–8 months cycles/year)
Centrifuge; Belt filter press; Filter press

Sludge disposal: agricultural land application (biosolids); landfill; incineration

9.6 Industrial Effluent Treatment (ETP)

Typical ETP sequence for industrial wastewater:
1. Screening / Bar rack (large solids)
2. Equalization tank (flow and load balancing; 6–24 hr HRT)
3. Neutralization (pH adjustment to 6–9)
4. Coagulation-flocculation (chemical precipitation of heavy metals)
5. Primary clarifier
6. Biological treatment (ASP or MBBR or SBR)
7. Secondary clarifier
8. Tertiary treatment (sand filter, activated carbon adsorption, UV/ozone)
9. Sludge treatment + disposal

Zero Liquid Discharge (ZLD): mandatory for textile, distillery, paper industries in India (CPCB/MoEF norms)
Effluent Treatment Plant (ETP) mandatory for industries discharging to surface water per Environment Protection Act 1986
📝 GATE Tip: ASP: MLSS = 2000–4000 mg/L; SRT = 5–15 days; HRT = 4–8 hours. SSF filtration rate = 0.1–0.4 m/hr; RSF = 4–12 m/hr. Biogas from anaerobic digestion: 60–70% CH₄. SVI = volume of sludge (mL/L) × 1000 / MLSS. These are perennial GATE questions.
10Air & Sound (Noise) Pollution

10.1 Composition of Clean Air

Component% by VolumeRole
Nitrogen (N₂)78.09%Inert; diluent
Oxygen (O₂)20.95%Supports combustion and respiration
Argon (Ar)0.93%Inert
Carbon Dioxide (CO₂)0.04% (415 ppm 2024)Greenhouse gas; increasing
Water vapour (H₂O)0–4% (variable)Weather, humidity
Trace gases<0.002%CH₄, N₂O, O₃, SO₂ etc.

10.2 Major Air Pollutants and Sources

PollutantPrimary SourceHealth EffectNAAQS Limit (24-hr)
Particulate Matter (PM₁₀)Dust, construction, vehicles, industriesRespiratory disease; PM₂.₅ reaches alveoli100 µg/m³ (PM₁₀); 60 µg/m³ (PM₂.₅)
SO₂Combustion of S-containing coal; power plants; refineriesAcid rain (H₂SO₄); respiratory irritant80 µg/m³ (24-hr annual 50)
NO₂ / NOxHigh-temperature combustion; vehiclesSmog; acid rain (HNO₃); lung damage80 µg/m³
COIncomplete combustion; vehiclesBinds haemoglobin (COHb); asphyxiation2 mg/m³ (8-hr)
Ozone (O₃)Photochemical reaction (NOx + VOC + sunlight)Lung irritant; eye irritation; crop damage100 µg/m³ (8-hr)
Lead (Pb)Leaded fuel (now banned); battery industry; smeltersNeurotoxin; cognitive impairment0.5 µg/m³ (24-hr)
VOCs / HydrocarbonsVehicles; evaporation; industrial solventsPrecursor to photochemical smog
CO₂ / CH₄Fossil fuels; agriculture; wasteGreenhouse effect; climate changeNo NAAQS (GHG)

10.3 Effects of Air Pollution

  • Health: Respiratory diseases (asthma, COPD, lung cancer), cardiovascular disease, neurological damage (lead, Hg)
  • Vegetation: Leaf burn (SO₂, O₃, HF); stunted growth; reduced yield
  • Visibility: Smog, haze, reduced visibility (PM, aerosols)
  • Materials: Corrosion of metals (SO₂); building stone damage (acid rain dissolves CaCO₃)
  • Climate: Greenhouse effect (CO₂, CH₄, N₂O, CFCs); ozone depletion (CFCs); acid rain (SO₂, NOx)

10.4 Air Pollution Control Devices

DeviceMechanismParticle Size RemovedEfficiency
Gravity settling chamberGravitational settling; large particles fall out>100 µm50–70%
Cyclone separatorCentrifugal force; particles thrown to wall; slide down5–200 µm70–90%
Electrostatic Precipitator (ESP)Corona discharge charges particles; collected on +ve plates0.5–10 µm; even sub-µm95–99.5%
Fabric filter (Baghouse)Filtration through woven/felted bags>0.5 µm95–99%
Wet scrubber (Venturi)Water spray wets and captures particles + gases0.5–100 µm; also SO₂, HCl70–99% (varies)
Catalytic converterOxidises CO, HC; reduces NOx (3-way catalyst)Gaseous; vehicles>90% for CO, HC

10.5 Atmospheric Dispersion — Gaussian Plume Model

Concentration at point (x, y, z) downwind of a stack:
C(x,y,z) = Q / (2π × σ_y × σ_z × U) × exp(−y²/2σ_y²)
× [exp(−(z−H)²/2σ_z²) + exp(−(z+H)²/2σ_z²)]

At ground level (z = 0) on centreline (y = 0):
C(x,0,0) = Q / (π × σ_y × σ_z × U) × exp(−H²/2σ_z²)

Where: Q = emission rate (g/s); U = mean wind speed at stack height (m/s)
H = effective stack height = physical height + plume rise (Δh)
σ_y, σ_z = horizontal and vertical dispersion coefficients (function of stability class and x)

Maximum ground level concentration:
C_max = Q / (π × e × U × σ_y × σ_z) at x where σ_z = H/√2

10.6 Pasquill-Gifford Stability Classes

ClassStabilityConditionDispersion
AExtremely unstableStrong insolation, low wind (<2 m/s)Rapid, wide dispersion; large σ
BUnstableModerate insolationGood dispersion
CSlightly unstableSlight insolationModerate
DNeutralOvercast or windy (>6 m/s)Average; most common
ESlightly stableClear night, moderate windPoor dispersion
FStableClear night, low windVery poor; fumigation possible

10.7 Noise Pollution

Sound Pressure Level (SPL): L = 20 × log₁₀(P/P_ref)
P_ref = 20 µPa (threshold of hearing); L in dB

Sound Intensity Level: LI = 10 × log₁₀(I/I_ref); I_ref = 10⁻¹² W/m²

Addition of decibels (incoherent sources):
L_total = 10 × log₁₀(Σ10^(Li/10))
For two equal sources: L_total = L + 3 dB (NOT 2L)

Equivalent Sound Level (L_eq): energy-averaged noise level over a period
L_eq = 10 × log₁₀[1/T × ∫₀ᵀ (P/P_ref)² dt]

10.8 Noise Standards (CPCB / IS 4954)

ZoneDay (6am–10pm) dB(A)Night (10pm–6am) dB(A)
Industrial7570
Commercial6555
Residential5545
Silence zone (hospitals, schools)5040

10.9 Health Effects of Noise

  • <70 dB: Conversation normal; no health risk
  • 70–85 dB: Prolonged exposure → hearing fatigue; TTS (Temporary Threshold Shift)
  • 85–100 dB: Risk of PTS (Permanent Threshold Shift / NIPTS) — occupational noise
  • >120 dB: Pain threshold; immediate damage
  • 140 dB: Eardrum rupture
  • Non-auditory effects: stress, hypertension, sleep disturbance, impaired concentration
ℹ️ NIPTS (Noise-Induced Permanent Threshold Shift) occurs at 4000 Hz first (4 kHz notch in audiogram is characteristic). OSHA permissible: 90 dB(A) for 8 hours/day; each 5 dB increase halves the permissible exposure time (5 dB exchange rate in US; 3 dB in WHO/India).
Solid Waste Management & Quick Revision

A. Solid Waste Management

A.1 Classification of Solid Wastes

TypeSourcesExamplesCharacteristics
Municipal Solid Waste (MSW)Household, commercial, institutionalFood waste, paper, plastic, glass, metalsMixed; 50–60% biodegradable in India
Industrial solid wasteFactories, power plantsFly ash, slag, packaging, process wasteMay contain hazardous substances
Biomedical wasteHospitals, labs, clinicsSharps, body fluids, infected materialHazardous; special handling (BMW Rules 2016)
Hazardous wasteChemical industries; EV batteriesSolvents, heavy metals, pesticidesToxic; special treatment and landfill (Hazardous Waste Rules)
Construction & demolition (C&D)Building demolition, excavationConcrete rubble, steel, brick, soilInert; large volume; recycling possible
E-wasteConsumer electronicsComputers, mobiles, batteriesContains heavy metals (Pb, Hg, Cd, Cr); E-waste Rules 2022

A.2 Municipal Solid Waste — Composition (India)

Typical Indian MSW: 40–60% biodegradable (food/organics), 15–20% inert (dirt/ash),
5–10% paper, 3–5% plastic, 3–5% glass, 2–4% metals, rest miscellaneous

Per capita waste generation: 0.3–0.6 kg/person/day (urban India)
Calorific value: 1000–2500 kcal/kg (low due to high moisture and inert content)

A.3 Integrated Solid Waste Management (ISWM)

ISWM follows the waste hierarchy (3R principle):

  • Reduce: Minimise waste generation at source (packaging design, consumer behaviour)
  • Reuse: Use items multiple times before disposal
  • Recycle: Material recovery — paper, glass, metals, plastics recycled
  • Recover energy: RDF (Refuse Derived Fuel), WTE (Waste-to-Energy) plants, biogas
  • Dispose: Sanitary landfill for residuals only (last resort)

A.4 Disposal Methods

MethodDescriptionAdvantageDisadvantage
Open dumpingWaste thrown in open without treatmentNone (cheap short-term)Illegal; vermin, leachate, gas; prohibited under SWM Rules 2016
Sanitary landfillCompacted waste in lined cells; covered daily; leachate collected; gas managedAll waste types; low cost per tonneLand intensive; 30+ year liability; leachate treatment needed
CompostingAerobic decomposition of organics; produces compost (soil conditioner)Reduces waste; produces useful productNeeds source segregation; market for compost
VermicompostingWorms (Eisenia) decompose organics; high-quality worm castingsHigh N compost; decentralisedSensitive to temperature; lower volume capacity
Incineration (WTE)Combustion at high temperature; residue to landfill; energy recovered90%+ volume reduction; energyAir pollution; expensive; needs high calorific value waste
BiomethanationAnaerobic digestion; biogas (CH₄) + compostEnergy + compost; closed systemNeeds organics segregation; technical operation
Pyrolysis / GasificationThermal decomposition without air; produces syngas, char, oilHandles mixed waste; energy rich productsComplex; expensive; emerging technology in India

A.5 Sanitary Landfill Design

Key components: liner system (HDPE), leachate collection, gas collection, monitoring wells, cover

Liner: HDPE geomembrane (1.5 mm min) + compacted clay (K ≤ 10⁻⁷ cm/s, 60 cm thick)
or composite liner (HDPE + clay)

Leachate: L = P × A × R_c / 1000 (m³/day)
P = precipitation (mm/day), A = area (m²), R_c = runoff coefficient (0.3–0.5 for covered landfill)

Landfill gas: 50% CH₄ + 50% CO₂ (approx); generated 1–5 m³/tonne refuse over 10–30 years
Gas: fire/explosion hazard within 300 m; must be collected or flared

Daily cover: minimum 15 cm soil or alternative cover (geosynthetic, tarps)

B. Quick Revision — All Key Numbers

Water Supply

Per capita demand: 135 lpcd (domestic); 200 lpcd (total design, IS 1172)
Peak factors: MDD = 1.8×ADD; MHD = 2.7×ADD
Design period: 30 yrs (dams), 15–20 yrs (treatment), 10 yrs (distribution)
Kuichling fire formula: Q = 3182√P (L/min; P in thousands)
Hardy-Cross: ΔQ = −Σh_L / (n×Σ|h_L/Q|) [n=1.85 HW, 2 DW]
Balancing storage = 1/3 daily demand + fire reserve + emergency reserve

Ground Water

Darcy's law: Q = KiA
Unconfined: Q = πK(H²−h²)/ln(R/r_w)
Confined: Q = 2πKb(H−h)/ln(R/r_w) = 2πT(H−h)/ln(R/r_w)
T = Kb; Sichardt: R = 3000(H−h)√K

Water Quality (IS 10500:2012)

pH: 6.5–8.5; Turbidity ≤ 5 NTU; TDS ≤ 500 mg/L
Total hardness ≤ 300 mg/L; Fluoride ≤ 1.0 mg/L; Nitrate ≤ 45 mg/L
Arsenic ≤ 0.01 mg/L; Iron ≤ 0.3 mg/L; Chloride ≤ 250 mg/L
Residual Cl₂ ≥ 0.2 mg/L (at tap); No coliforms in 100 mL treated water

Water Treatment

Alum: optimal pH 6.5–7.5; G×t = 10⁴–10⁵ (flocculation)
Sedimentation overflow rate: 12,000–18,000 L/m²/day (plain); 30,000–40,000 (coag.)
SSF rate: 0.1–0.4 m/hr; RSF rate: 4–12 m/hr; RSF backwash: 12–15 m/hr
Chick's law: N = N₀e^(−kt); Free residual Cl₂ ≥ 0.2 mg/L at tap

Sewerage

Sewage = 80% water supply; Peak = 3×DWF (small sewers)
V_min = 0.75 m/s; V_max = 3.0 m/s; Manning n = 0.013 (RCC)
Q_max in circular pipe: at d/D = 0.94; V_max at d/D = 0.81
Manhole spacing: 30–50 m (straight); at all junctions and bends

Sewage Quality

BOD₅ domestic: 150–300 mg/L; COD: 250–600 mg/L
BOD_t = L₀(1−e^(−k_d t)); k_d at 20°C ≈ 0.23/day (base-e)
DO_sat at 20°C = 9.08 mg/L; at 25°C = 8.26 mg/L
Streeter-Phelps: D_t = k_d L₀/(k_r−k_d)×(e^(−k_d t) − e^(−k_r t)) + D₀e^(−k_r t)

Sewage Treatment

Primary: BOD 25–40%; Secondary (ASP): 85–95%
ASP: MLSS 2000–4000; SRT 5–15 days; HRT 4–8 hrs; SVI 80–120 (good)
Biogas: 60–70% CH₄; Anaerobic digestion SRT: 20–30 days
CPCB effluent standard: BOD ≤ 30 mg/L; SS ≤ 100 mg/L for discharge to rivers

Air Pollution

NAAQS: PM₁₀ ≤ 100 µg/m³; PM₂.₅ ≤ 60 µg/m³; SO₂ ≤ 80 µg/m³; NO₂ ≤ 80 µg/m³
Gaussian plume: C(x,0,0) = Q/(π×σ_y×σ_z×U) × exp(−H²/2σ_z²)
Stability class A (most unstable) → F (most stable)

Noise

SPL: L = 20 log₁₀(P/20µPa) [dB]
Two equal sources: L_total = L + 3 dB
CPCB Residential: Day 55, Night 45 dB(A)
CPCB Silence zone: Day 50, Night 40 dB(A)
Pain threshold: 120 dB; 4000 Hz notch = NIPTS signature

C. Mnemonics

Water treatment sequence: "Screens Are Cleverly Set For Distribution"
Screening → Aeration → Coagulation → Sedimentation → Filtration → Disinfection

IS 10500 key limits (the "5-5-300" rule):
Turbidity ≤ 5 NTU | TDS ≤ 500 mg/L | Hardness ≤ 300 mg/L | Fluoride ≤ 1.0 | Nitrate ≤ 45

Peak factors: "1.8 and 2.7"
MDD = 1.8× ADD; MHD = 2.7× ADD → "1.8 and 2.7 — drink at Maximum Daily (1.8) and Maximum Hourly (2.7)"

RSF vs SSF: "Rapid is Raw — needs coagulation; Slow is Schmutzdecke — biological film"
RSF rate = 4–12 m/hr; SSF rate = 0.1–0.4 m/hr (30× slower)

Well equations — "UC for Unconfined, C for Confined":
Unconfined: Q∝(H²−h²); Confined: Q∝(H−h) — note squared vs linear

Activated sludge SVI: "80 to 120 = good sludge; above 200 = bulking (bad)"

Noise zones (D–C–R–S): "75–65–55–50 day; 70–55–45–40 night"
Industrial–Commercial–Residential–Silence zone

Air pollution control (increasing efficiency):
Gravity chamber → Cyclone → Wet scrubber → Baghouse → ESP
"Gravity Catches Some Big Elephants"

Sewer self-cleansing: "0.75 m/s min; 3 m/s max"
"Sewage must at least Walk (0.75) but not Sprint (3) through the pipe"

D. Exam-Angle Comparison

TopicGATE FocusESE FocusSSC JE Focus
Water demandPer capita values; peak factors; population methodsDetailed demand calculations; fire demand; design periodPer capita; MDD and MHD values
Well hydraulicsNumerical: unconfined/confined well equations; T = KbTheis method; Thiem; test analysis; Sichardt RTypes of aquifers; formula recognition
Water qualityIS 10500 key limits; hardness types; BOD kinetics; Chick's lawJar test; coagulant chemistry; Langelier index; breakpoint ClIS 10500 key limits only
Water treatmentSSF vs RSF rates; sedimentation overflow rate; disinfection CTTank design calculations; filter media specs; G×t for flocculationSequence of treatment; types of filters
Sewer designManning eq; self-cleansing velocity; Q at d/D=0.94; sewer typesFull sewer design; storm water; rational method; storm overflowsManning equation; sewer materials; manhole spacing
Sewage qualityBOD-COD; Streeter-Phelps; DO sag; SVI; F/MFull river quality analysis; critical DO calculationsBOD definition; COD concept
Sewage treatmentASP design parameters; SRT; HRT; MLSS; biogas CH₄%Complete STP design; ETP; ZLD; NRC formula for TFTypes of treatment; primary vs secondary
Solid wasteSanitary landfill components; composting; 3R hierarchyLandfill design; leachate; gas collection; EIATypes of waste; disposal methods
Air pollutionGaussian plume formula; NAAQS limits; stability classesStack design; control device selection; photochemical smogPollutant sources and effects; NAAQS limits
NoisedB addition; Leq; CPCB limitsdB(A) calculations; noise control measures; barrier attenuationZone-wise noise limits; health effects