Biological Monitoring of Thermal Effects of Cooling Water Discharges from Danish Power Plants

1983 ◽  
Vol 15 (10) ◽  
pp. 89-99
Author(s):  
Bo Møller ◽  
K I Dahl-Madsen

In the years from 1970-1982 52 site studies and monitoring studies have been carried out at major existing and planned power plants. The results from the studies have been used in a planning system for water quality. This planning system, which is water quality related, is described in this paper. An important part of the planning system is the description of size and distribution of excess temperature fields and the related biological conditions. In the biological monitoring, emphasis is placed on the benthic community as more vulnerable to the cooling water discharge. The studies have shown that the excess temperature field within the 1-2° isotherm can produce measurable changes in the benthic community. The temperature effect in the pelagic zone is marginal, however, some effects are seen at sites with a deep water intake of nutrient rich water. Entrainment of fish and Zooplankton can be important in bays and estuaries.

1983 ◽  
Vol 15 (10) ◽  
pp. 165-175
Author(s):  
J. Bundgaard Nielsen

In the process of monitroing the impacts resulting from thermal pollution from power plants the excess heat is widely used as an indicator. One single environmental standard may however not be appropriate to cover the different physical aspects of locations for such plants. This paper discusses various approaches (intensive and long-term measurements, modelling) and the interrelation to hydrographic conditions, and as the final result, the definition or revision of monitoring programmes. The presentation is elucidated with examples from recent Danish monitoring programmes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 4103-4121
Author(s):  
Josefine Maas ◽  
Susann Tegtmeier ◽  
Yue Jia ◽  
Birgit Quack ◽  
Jonathan V. Durgadoo ◽  
...  

Abstract. Bromoform is the major by-product from chlorination of cooling water in coastal power plants. The number of power plants in East and Southeast Asian economies has increased rapidly, exceeding mean global growth. Bottom-up estimates of bromoform emissions based on few measurements appear to under-represent the industrial sources of bromoform from East Asia. Using oceanic Lagrangian analyses, we assess the amount of bromoform produced from power plant cooling-water treatment in East and Southeast Asia. The spread of bromoform is simulated as passive particles that are advected using the three-dimensional velocity fields over the years 2005/2006 from the high-resolution NEMO-ORCA0083 ocean general circulation model. Simulations are run for three scenarios with varying initial bromoform concentrations based on the range of bromoform measurements in cooling-water discharge. Comparing the modelled anthropogenic bromoform to in situ observations in the surface ocean and atmosphere, the two lower scenarios show the best agreement, suggesting initial bromoform concentrations in cooling water to be around 20–60 µg L−1. Based on these two scenarios, the model produces elevated bromoform in coastal waters of East Asia with average concentrations of 23 and 68 pmol L−1 and maximum values in the Yellow Sea, Sea of Japan and East China Sea. The industrially produced bromoform is quickly emitted into the atmosphere with average air–sea flux of 3.1 and 9.1 nmolm-2h-1, respectively. Atmospheric abundances of anthropogenic bromoform are derived from simulations with the Lagrangian particle dispersion model FLEXPART based on ERA-Interim wind fields in 2016. In the marine boundary layer of East Asia, the FLEXPART simulations show mean anthropogenic bromoform mixing ratios of 0.4–1.3 ppt, which are 2–6 times larger compared to the climatological bromoform estimate. During boreal winter, the simulations show that some part of the anthropogenic bromoform is transported by the northeasterly winter monsoon towards the tropical regions, whereas during boreal summer anthropogenic bromoform is confined to the Northern Hemisphere subtropics. Convective events in the tropics entrain an additional 0.04–0.05 ppt of anthropogenic bromoform into the stratosphere, averaged over tropical Southeast Asia. In our simulations, only about 10 % of anthropogenic bromoform is outgassed from power plants located in the tropics south of 20∘ N, so that only a small fraction of the anthropogenic bromoform reaches the stratosphere. We conclude that bromoform from cooling-water treatment in East Asia is a significant source of atmospheric bromine and might be responsible for annual emissions of 100–300 Mmol of Br in this region. These anthropogenic bromoform sources from industrial water treatment might be a missing factor in global flux estimates of organic bromine. While the current emissions of industrial bromoform provide a significant contribution to regional tropospheric budgets, they provide only a minor contribution to the stratospheric bromine budget of 0.24–0.30 ppt of Br.


2015 ◽  
Vol 799-800 ◽  
pp. 734-738
Author(s):  
Tian Qi Dai ◽  
Shi Wei Yao ◽  
Zhi Guo Wei

The waste heat emissions of thermal discharge from floating nuclear power plants may have a negative thermal effect on the environment. Study on the dilution and diffusion of cooling water plays an important role in thermal pollution prevention. The cooling water discharge process can be condensed into the thermal jet in cross flow. According to the theory of computational fluid dynamics, the mathematical model of round horizontal thermal jets in cross flow is established. The 3D numerical simulation of thermal jets based on finite volume method is achieved by using the Realizable k-ε turbulence model and the Semi-implicit method for pressure linked equations, and the three-dimensional trajectory of thermal jet are obtained. The rationality of analysis method is approved by comparing calculation value with experimental value. The temperature distributions in thermal jets are studied through the numerical experiments conducted under different cross-flow velocity and different emission angle. As a result, the impacts of these conditions on thermal pollution area are found, and the theoretic bases are provided for the design of the cooling water discharge pipe.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josefine Maas ◽  
Yue Jia ◽  
Birgit Quack ◽  
Jonathan V. Durgadoo ◽  
Arne Biastoch ◽  
...  

Abstract. Bromoform is the major by-product from chlorination of cooling water in coastal power plants. Power plants in East and Southeast Asian economies have increased rapidly exceeding global growth. Bottom-up estimates of bromoform emissions based on few measurements appear to under-represent the industrial sources of bromoform from East Asia. By means of Lagrangian analyses, we assess the amount of bromoform produced from power plant cooling water treatment in East and Southeast Asia. The spread of bromoform is simulated as passive particles that are advected using the 3-dimensional velocity fields from the high-resolution NEMO-ORCA0083 ocean general circulation model. Simulations are run for three scenarios with varying initial bromoform concentrations given by the range of measurements of bromoform in cooling water discharge. From comparison of our model results to observations, we expect initial bromoform concentrations between 20–60 µg L−1 used for the two lower scenarios, to be most realistic. From these two scenarios, we find elevated bromoform along the coastlines of East Asia with average concentrations of 23 and 68 pmol L−1 and maximum values in the Yellow, Japan and East China Seas. The industrially-produced bromoform is quickly emitted into the atmosphere with average air-sea flux of 3.1 and 9.1 nmol m−2 h−1, respectively. Based on the emission estimates, atmospheric abundances of anthropogenic bromoform are derived from FLEXPART simulations and compared to simulations based on climatological bottom-up emission estimates. In the marine boundary layer of East Asia, anthropogenic bromoform amounts up to 0.5–1.6 ppt during boreal summer and is thus 2–7 times larger compared to the bottom-up estimates. During boreal winter some part of the anthropogenic bromoform is transported by the northeasterly winter monsoon towards the tropical regions, whereas during boreal summer anthropogenic bromoform is confined to the northern hemisphere subtropics. Convective events in the tropics entrain an additional 0.03 ppt of anthropogenic bromoform into the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere. We find that bromoform from cooling water treatment in East Asia is a significant source of atmospheric bromine responsible for annual emissions of 100–300 Mmol Br, which might be a missing factor in global flux estimates of organic bromine. About 90 % of this anthropogenic bromoform is discharged north of 20° N, while in the tropics natural sources dominate and only a small fraction of the anthropogenic bromoform reaches the stratosphere.


1983 ◽  
Vol 15 (10) ◽  
pp. 177-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anders Malmgren-Hansen ◽  
K I Dahl-Madsen

Discharge of cooling water from power plants has various effects on the ecosystem in coastal areas. The effect on primary production due to the rise in temperature in the outlet area and the decimation of zooplankton organisms passing through the cooling system of the power plant can be calculated by means of mathematical models. Calculations of the consequences of a considerable increase in cooling water discharge from the “Vendsyssel” power plant are presented. The decimation of zooplankton is calculated by means of a combined 2-dimensional hydraulic and zooplankton-growth model. Calculations of the effects on primary production are carried out by use of a combined 1-dimensional hydraulic and eutrophication model.


Author(s):  
Rolando García

Use of submarine outfall pipelines became more common since World Bank Group issued a new guideline for maximum emissions levels for thermal power plants in 1998 (van Dijk, 2005). The more restrictive levels for temperature increase at the receiving water, requires outfall systems to conduct the water down to greater depths to achieve the required dilution standard. However, air entrainment control into outfall pipes could be challenging, especially for discharges with high flowrates for which conventional deaeration chambers become too large. The problem could turn more difficult in coastal shelf areas at seismic zones, where the hydraulic height of the incoming flow must be effectively controlled and the design not only has to pursue hydraulic objectives but also stability requirements for these massive structures subjected to relevant seismic thrusts. A vortex drop structure was designed for the cooling water discharge system of a thermal power plant in Mejillones Bay, Chile. The structure addresses the elevation difference between the return flow pipe and the ocean outfall pipelines while adhering to the spatial restrictions at the project site. Energy dissipation as well as limitation of air entrainment into the outfall pipelines were critical design considerations. Tests where done on a 1:12.5 scale (Froude) physical model. Prototype structure is under construction. Operation is planned to start on mid-2018.


1973 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 237-255
Author(s):  
TODOR MILANOV

The extension of the warm water plume in receiving waters used as recipients for thermal pollution has been studied using a meteorological approach. For some real cases the area of excess temperature has been examined and compared to the conditions when heat is transferred to the atmosphere only. Numerical values are given for the warm water areas for different localities in Sweden for cooling water discharge corresponding to 2000 MW waste heat.


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