Metadata
Title
12-724   Biological Wastewater Treatment
Category
courses
UUID
b4daa5151d5846a995ea9b768da645b9
Source URL
https://cee.engineering.cmu.edu/education/course-descriptions/12-724.html
Parent URL
https://cee.engineering.cmu.edu/education/graduate/courses.html
Crawl Time
2026-03-25T05:02:32+00:00
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12-724   Biological Wastewater Treatment

Source: https://cee.engineering.cmu.edu/education/course-descriptions/12-724.html Parent: https://cee.engineering.cmu.edu/education/graduate/courses.html

The exploitation of microbiological processes for environmental quality control is both historic and emergent. Engineered microbial systems have been used to treat wastewater for over 100 years, and they remain a critical component of modern operations. At the same time, new technologies are emerging to address modern challenges in the remediation and detoxification of hazardous chemicals and recovery of resources from waste. This course connects established principles of microbiology and engineering with empirical observations of complex microbial systems to develop quantitative tools for engineering biological systems. The course includes aerobic and anaerobic treatment perspectives as well as suspended growth and biofilm processes. Concepts are developed from a wastewater perspective but include applications in advanced, nutrient removal and resource recovery.

Instructor: Joe Moore