Professor Simon Tait
School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering
Professor of Water Engineering
+44 114 222 5771
Full contact details
School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering
Room MezC6a
Sir Frederick Mappin Building (Broad Lane Building)
Mappin Street
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S1 3JD
- Profile
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My research results in improved measurement and management methodologies to allow urban water infrastructure systems to cope better with pressures caused by climate change, changing patterns of use and physical deterioration.
Professor Simon Tait
Some of Simon’s research focuses on how sediments and pollutants get into water networks and environments; specifically, the processes associated with erosion, transportation and deposition of sediment in river and urban drainage systems. This has evolved to the study of near-bed turbulence and how this interacts with water surfaces waves, offering the potential for the measurement of river and in-pipe turbulence from observations of the water surface.
When sewers fail due to the system filling up or blockages, they can overflow into rivers and urban environments which is biologically damaging and can be detrimental to the aquatic ecology. By working to ensure better management of sewer and drainage networks, Simon aims to prevents this and minimise the resources spent on maintaining sewers and clean-up. He uses lab experiments and surrogate or real sediments as well as numerical modelling to discover how sediments and pollutants move within networks and rivers. By understanding how sediments and networks perform, better decisions can be made to ensure the safety of the urban drainage systems that serve large sections of the population.
Simon is involved in the development of novel inspection techniques to allow the large sewer and drainage networks to be better managed as they face increased pressures from climate change and deterioration. He helped form a spin-out instrumentation company with Professor Kirill Horoshenkov, which uses acoustic-based instruments to search for defects in pipes.
- Publications
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Journal articles
- . Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 966, a18.
- . Water Resources Research, 58(9).
- . Journal of Pipeline Systems Engineering and Practice, 13(3).
- . Journal of Cleaner Production, 358.
- . Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Smart Infrastructure and Construction.
- . Geomechanics for Energy and the Environment, 29.
- . Journal of Infrastructure Systems, 27(3).
- . Journal of Hydraulic Research.
- . Water Research, 194.
- . Journal of Hydraulic Research, 59(1), 1-20.
- . Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 123.
- . Advances in Water Resources.
- . Journal of Hydroinformatics.
- . International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids.
- . Global Environmental Change, 57.
- . Water Research, 150, 368-379.
- . Water Research, 145, 618-630.
- . Water Resources Research, 54(11), 8674-8691.
- . Water Research, 143, 561-569.
- . Journal of Environmental Engineering, 144(7), ---.
- . Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 21(2), 1077-1091.
- . International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids, 83(1), 3-27.
- . Physics of Fluids, 28(10), ---.
- . Journal of Hydraulic Engineering.
- . Journal of Hydraulic Research, 54(5), 516-526.
- . Geothermics, 53, 171-182.
- . Journal of Hydraulic Research, 52(6), 744-758.
- . Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, 118(3), 1864-1876.
- . Water Resources Research, 49(9), 5765-5777.
- . Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, 117(4).
- . Journal of Geophysical Research, 117.
- . Journal of Hydraulic Engineering, 137, 1173-1189.
- . EARTH SURF PROC LAND, 35(10), 1240-1246.
- . Water Research, 44(13), 3893-3904.
- . EARTH SURF PROC LAND, 34(3), 384-397.
- . Water Resource Research, 44.
- . Water Resources Research, 44(4).
- . EARTH SURF PROC LAND, 31(14), 1839-1848.
- . WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 42(6).
- . WATER RESEARCH, 39(20), 5221-5231.
- . WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 39(12).
- Research group
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SuDS (Sustainable Drainage Systems) and Urban Drainage
Environmental Fluid Mechanics
- Grants
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Past Grants
The EPSRC-funded Grand Challenge Centre for Water, comprising 6 UK universities and 100+ industrial partners working in collaboration to develop the sustainable water solutions of the future and to accelerate innovation uptake across the water sector.
- Potential PhD offerings
Unfortunately I am not seeking any PhD Students at this time, however please contact me if you are interested in doing a project in my research area.