Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

As expected, the effluent turbidity is much higher than that of the control experiment. The presence of saturated water in the influent has a negative effect on the effluent turbidity. In order to quantitatively examine the performance of the experiment with saturated water, data from the control ramp experiment was referenced. The average difference in error between the results was found to be 3.857 (What error and which results are you referring to on the graph? You can report standard deviation or relative standard deviation, but if you want to do this, I would suggest adding error bars for each point on the graph), with the effluent turbidity of the saturated water experiment generally higher in all cases than that of the control experiment. The bubbles released as a result of a pressure drop in the system disturbed floc formation, allowing less floc particles to settle and more, smaller, lighter particles to leave with the effluent. (Note floc break-up as a cause since you noted cloudy water from observation before)

Experiment 2: Average Effluent Turbidity vs Velocity - High Floc Blanket Formation

...