
COMMON ABBREVIATIONS("A")
A&I—
Alternative and Innovative (Wastewater Treatment System)
AA— Accountable Area; Adverse Action; Advices of Allowance; Assistant
Administrator; Associate Administrator; Atomic Absorption
AAEE— American Academy of Environmental Engineers
AANWR— Alaskan Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
AAP— Asbestos Action Program
AAPCO— American Association of Pesticide Control Officials
AARC— Alliance for Acid Rain Control
ABEL— EPA’s computer model for analyzing a violator’s ability
to pay a civil penalty.
ABES— Alliance for Balanced Environmental Solutions
AC— Actual Commitment. Advisory Circular
A&C— Abatement and Control
ACA— American Conservation Association
ACBM— Asbestos-Containing Building Material
ACE— Alliance for Clean Energy
ACE— Any Credible Evidence
ACEEE— American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy
ACFM— Actual Cubic Feet Per Minute
ACL— Alternate Concentration Limit. Analytical Chemistry Laboratory
ACM— Asbestos-Containing Material
ACP— Agriculture Control Program (Water Quality Management); ACP—
Air Carcinogen Policy
ACQUIRE— Aquatic Information Retrieval
ACQR— Air Quality Control Region
ACS— American Chemical Society
ACT— Action
ACTS— Asbestos Contractor Tracking System
ACWA— American Clean Water Association
ACWM— Asbestos-Containing Waste Material
ADABA— Acceptable Data Base
ADB— Applications Data Base
ADI— Acceptable Daily Intake
ADP— AHERA Designated Person; Automated Data Processing
ADQ— Audits of Data Quality
ADR— Alternate Dispute Resolution
ADSS— Air Data Screening System
ADT— Average Daily Traffic
AEA— Atomic Energy Act
AEC— Associate Enforcement Counsels
AEE— Alliance for Environmental Education
AEERL— Air and Energy Engineering Research Laboratory
AEM— Acoustic Emission Monitoring
AERE— Association of Environmental and Resource Economists
AES— Auger Electron Spectrometry
AFA— American Forestry Association
AFCA— Area Fuel Consumption Allocation
AFCEE—Air Force Center for Environmental Excellence
AFS— AIRS Facility Subsystem
AFUG— AIRS Facility Users Group
AH— Allowance Holders
AHERA— Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act
AHU— Air Handling Unit
AI— Active Ingredient
AIC— Active to Inert Conversion
AICUZ— Air Installation Compatible Use Zones
AID— Agency for International Development
AIHC— American Industrial Health Council
AIP— Auto Ignition Point
AIRMON— Atmospheric Integrated Research Monitoring Network
AIRS— Aerometric Information Retrieval System
AL— Acceptable Level
ALA— Delta-Aminolevulinic Acid
ALA-O— Delta-Aminolevulinic Acid Dehydrates
ALAPO— Association of Local Air Pollution Control Officers
ALARA— As Low As Reasonably Achievable
ALC— Application Limiting Constituent
ALJ— Administrative Law Judge
ALMS— Atomic Line Molecular Spectroscopy
ALR— Action Leakage Rate
AMBIENS— Atmospheric Mass Balance of Industrially Emitted and Natural
Sulfur
AMOS— Air Management Oversight System
AMPS— Automatic Mapping and Planning System
AMSA— Association of Metropolitan Sewer Agencies
ANC— Acid Neutralizing Capacity
ANPR— Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
ANRHRD— Air, Noise, & Radiation Health Research Division/ORD
ANSS— American Nature Study Society
AOAC— Association of Official Analytical Chemists
AOC— Abnormal Operating Conditions
AOD— Argon-Oxygen Decarbonization
AOML— Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory
AP— Accounting Point
APA— Administrative Procedures Act
APCA— Air Pollution Control Association
APCD— Air Pollution Control District
APDS— Automated Procurement Documentation System
APHA— American Public Health Association
APRAC— Urban Diffusion Model for Carbon Monoxide from Motor Vehicle Traffic
APTI— Air Pollution Training Institute
APWA— American Public Works Association
AQ-7— Non-reactive Pollutant Modelling
AQCCT— Air-Quality Criteria and Control Techniques
AQCP— Air Quality Control Program
AQCR— Air-Quality Control Region
AQD— Air-Quality Digest
AQDHS— Air-Quality Data Handling System
AQDM— Air-Quality Display Model
AQMA— Air-Quality Maintenance Area
AQMD— Air Quality Management District
AQMP— Air-Quality Maintenance Plan; Air-Quality Management Plan
AQSM— Air-Quality Simulation Model
AQTAD— Air-Quality Technical Assistance Demonstration
AR— Administrative Record
A&R— Air and Radiation
ARA— Assistant Regional Administrator; Associate Regional Administrator
ARAC— Acid Rain Advisory Committee
ARAR— Applicable or Relevant and Appropriate Standards, Limitations, Criteria,
and Requirements
ARB— Air Resources Board
ARC— Agency Ranking Committee
ARCC— American Rivers Conservation Council
ARCS— Alternative Remedial Contract Strategy
ARG— American Resources Group
ARIP— Accidental Release Information Program
ARL— Air Resources Laboratory
ARM— Air Resources Management
ARNEWS— Acid Rain National Early Warning Systems
ARO— Alternate Regulatory Option
ARRP— Acid Rain Research Program
ARRPA— Air Resources Regional Pollution Assessment Model
ARS— Agricultural Research Service
ARZ— Auto Restricted Zone
AS— Area Source
ASC— Area Source Category
ASDWA— Association of State Drinking Water Administrators
ASHAA— Asbestos in Schools Hazard Abatement Act
ASHRAE— American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning
Engineers
ASIWCPA— Association of State and Interstate Water Pollution Control Administrators
ASMDHS— Airshed Model Data Handling System
ASRL— Atmospheric Sciences Research Laboratory
AST— Advanced Secondary (Wastewater) Treatment
ASTHO— Association of State and Territorial Health Officers
ASTM— American Society for Testing and Materials
ASTSWMO— Association of State and Territorial Solid Waste Management Officials
AT— Advanced Treatment. Alpha Track Detection
ATERIS— Air Toxics Exposure and Risk Information System
ATS— Action Tracking System; Allowance Tracking System
ATSDR— Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
ATTF— Air Toxics Task Force
AUSM— Advanced Utility Simulation Model
A/WPR— Air/Water Pollution Report
AWRA— American Water Resources Association
AWT— Advanced Wastewater Treatment
AWWA— American Water Works Association
AWWARF— American Water Works Association Research Foundation.
ABSOLUTE FILTER RATING: Filter rating meaning that 99.9 percent of essentially all of the particles larger than a specified micron rating will be trapped on or within the filter.
ABSORPTION: The process of substance actually penetrating into the structure of another substance. This is different from adsorption in which one substances adheres to the surface of another.
Acid Neutralizing Capacity— Measure of ability of a base (e.g. water or soil) to resist changes in pH.
ACIDIC: The condition of water or soil which contains a sufficient amount of acid substances to lower the pH below 7.0.
ACTION LEVELS:
1. Regulatory levels recommended by EPA for enforcement by FDA and USDA when pesticide residues occur in food or feed commodities for reasons other than the direct application of the pesticide. As opposed to “tolerances” which are established for residues occurring as a direct result of proper usage, action levels are set for inadvertent residues resulting from previous legal use or accidental contamination.
2. In the Superfund program, the existence of a contaminant concentration in the environment high enough to warrant action or trigger a response under SARA and the National Oil and Hazardous Substances Contingency Plan. The term is also used in other regulatory programs.
ACTIVATED CARBON: A form of elemental carbon whose particles have large surface area with adsorptive qualities, primarily used to remove chlorine, objectionable tastes and odors and numerous toxic organic compounds from water. Produced by heating carbonaceous substances, bituminous coal or cellulose-based substances such as wood or coconut shell, to 700 degrees Centigrade or less in the absence of air to form a carbonized char and then activating or oxidizing at 800 to 1000 degrees Centigrade with oxidizing gases such as carbon dioxide or steam to form pores, thus creating a highly porous adsorbent material.
ACTIVATED CARBON BLOCK: a blend of fine activated carbon, water and a suitable binders(such as polyethylene or similar material) that is mixed and molded and hardened or extruded to a cartridge filter of any size and shape. Occasionally specialized media are added along with activated carbon to provide customized performances of specific contaminants such as lead.
ACTIVATOR: A chemical added to a pesticide to increase its activity.
ACTIVE INGREDIENT: In any pesticide product, the component that kills, or otherwise controls, target pests. Pesticides are regulated primarily on the basis of active ingredients.
ACUTE EXPOSURE: A single exposure to a toxic substance which may result in severe biological harm or death. Acute exposures are usually characterized as lasting no longer than a day, as compared to longer, continuing exposure over a period of time.
ACUTE TOXICITY: The ability of a substance to cause
severe biological harm or death soon after a single exposure or dose. Also,
any poisonous effect resulting from a single short-term exposure to a toxic
substance.
ADSORPTION:
Removal of a pollutant from air or water by collecting the pollutant on the
surface of a solid material; e.g., an advanced method of treating waste in which
activated carbon removes organic matter from waste-water.
ADVANCED TREATMENT: A level of wastewater treatment more stringent than secondary treatment; requires an 85-percent reduction in conventional pollutant concentration or a significant reduction in non-conventional pollutants. Sometimes called tertiary treatment.
ADVANCED WASTEWATER TREATMENT: Any treatment of sewage that goes beyond
the secondary or biological water treatment stage and includes the removal of
nutrients such as phosphorus and nitrogen and a high percentage of suspended
solids.
AERATION:
A process
which promotes biological degradation of organic matter in water. The process
may be passive (as when waste is exposed to air), or active (as when a mixing
or bubbling device introduces the air). Iron, manganese, etc are targets of
this process.
AERATION TANK: A chamber used to inject air into water.
AEROBIC: Life or processes that require, or are not destroyed by, the presence of oxygen.
AEROBIC TREATMENT: Process by which microbes decompose
complex organic compounds in the presence of oxygen and use the liberated energy
for reproduction and growth. (Such processes include extended aeration, trickling
filtration, and rotating biological contactors.)
AIR BINDING: Situation where air enters the filter media and harms both the filtration and backwash processes.
AIR CHANGES PER HOUR(ACH): The movement of a volume
of air in a given period of time; if a bottling cleanroom, for example, has
one air change per hour, it means that the air in the cleanroom will be replaced
in a one-hour period.
AIR GAP: Open vertical gap or empty space that separates drinking water supply to be protected from another water system in a treatment plant or other location. The open gap protects the drinking water from contamination by backflow or back siphonage. Commonly found in home-use reverse osmosis systems.
AIR SPARGING: Injecting air or oxygen into an aquifer to strip or flush volatile contaminants as air bubbles up through The ground water and is captured by a vapor extraction system.
AIR STRIPPING: A treatment system that removes
volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from contaminated ground water or surface
water by forcing an airstream through the water and causing the compounds to
evaporate.
ALGAE: Simple rootless plants that grow in sunlit waters in proportion to the amount of available nutrients. They can affect water quality adversely by lowering the dissolved oxygen in the water. They are food for fish and small aquatic animals.
ALGAL BLOOMS: Sudden spurts of algal growth, which
can affect water quality adversely and indicate potentially hazardous changes
in local water chemistry.
ALGICIDE: Substance or chemical used specifically
to kill or control algae.
ALIQUOT: A measured portion of a sample taken for
analysis. One or more aliquots make up a sample.
ALKALINITY: A measurement
of the quantity of chemicals present in water which can neutralize acids. These
include carbon dioxide, bicarbonate, carbonate and hydroxides. pH conditions
which exceed 7.0.
ALUM: See aluminum
sulfate.
ALUMINUM
SULFATE: An
aluminum salt commonly used as a flocculent by municipal water treatment facilities.
AMPHOTERIC:
A
substance, such as aluminum, capable of acting as either an acid or base.
ANAEROBIC: A condition
in which there is no air or no available free oxygen. Sometimes relates to microbes
which can exist without oxygen.
ANIONS:
See
ion.
AQUIFER: Any geological formation containing water; one that supplies water for wells, springs, etc.
COMMON ABBREVIATIONS("B")
BAA— Board of Assistance Appeals
BAC— Bioremediation Action Committee; Biotechnology Advisory Committee
BACM— Best Available Control Measures
BACT— Best Available Control Technology
BADT— Best Available Demonstrated Technology
BAF— Bioaccumulation Factor
BaP— Benzo(a)Pyrene
BAP— Benefits Analysis Program
BART— Best Available Retrofit Technology
BASIS— Battelle’s Automated Search Information System
BAT— Best Available Technology
BATEA— Best Available Treatment Economically Achievable
BCT— Best Control Technology
BCPCT— Best Conventional Pollutant Control Technology
BDAT— Best Demonstrated Achievable Technology
BDCT— Best Demonstrated Control Technology
BDT— Best Demonstrated Technology
BEJ— Best Engineering Judgement. Best Expert Judgment
BF— Bonafide Notice of Intent to Manufacture or Import (IMD/OTS)
BID— Background Information Document. Buoyancy Induced Dispersion
BIOPLUME— Model to Predict the Maximum Extent of Existing Plumes
BMP— Best Management Practice(s)
BMR— Baseline Monitoring Report
BO— Budget Obligations
BOA— Basic Ordering Agreement (Contracts)
BOD— Biochemical Oxygen Demand. Biological Oxygen Demand
BOF— Basic Oxygen Furnace
BOP— Basic Oxygen Process
BOPF— Basic Oxygen Process Furnace
BOYSNC— Beginning of Year Significant Non-Compliers
BP— Boiling Point
BPJ— Best Professional Judgment
BPT— Best Practicable Technology. Pest Practicable Treatment
BPWTT— Best Practical Wastewater Treatment Technology
BRI— Building-Related Illness
BRS— Bibliographic Retrieval Service
BSI— British Standards Institute
BSO— Benzene Soluble Organics
BTZ— Below the Treatment Zone
BUN— Blood Urea Nitrogen
BACKWASH: Reverse of a solution's flow through a system(i.e. water softener). Often used as a cleansing mechanism in sand and dual media filters.
BACTERIA: Any of a class of microscopic plants having round, rod-like spiral or filamentous single cell or noncellular bodies, often aggregated into colonies or mobile by means of flagella. Living in soil, water, organic matter or the bodies of plants and animals and being autotrophic(self-generative), saprophytic(digests chemicals already in their environment) or parasitic.
BACTERICIDE: Material capable of inhibiting or destroying bacteria. Function is known as bactericidal.
BACTERIOSTATIC: Material capable of reducing the rate of bacterial growth. Sometimes confused with bactericidal.
BINDERS: When used in reference to cartridge filters, refers to chemicals used to hold, or bind, short fibers together in a filter. Also may refer to various chemicals used to bind polymeric compounds in products such as plastic bottles.
BIOFILM: An aggregation of active, multi-layered microbes found on surfaces and in particular inside tubing and pipes. May be difficult to remove by chemical means due to multiple layers and lack of fluid dynamics at surfaces where it resides.
BLINDING: The fouling or plugging of pores in a membrane, usually by a gel-like substance.
BOD: Biochemical
oxygen demand.
BRACKISH
WATER:
Water containing between 1000 and 15000 mg/l of dissolved solids is generally
considered to be brackish.
BREAKTHROUGH: The first appearance in the effluent of an adsorbate of interest under specified conditions.
BRIDGING(OR
SALT BRIDGING): The
caking of salts in a dry water softener tank which causes failure of the liquid
or brine beneath the dry salt to become saturated. The net result of bridging
is insufficient salt to properly regenerate the resin.
BRINE (same as Reject
Water): One of two streams of fluids generated by a Distiller or Reverse Osmosis
unit. It contains the impurities removed from the feed water. Characteristically
30,000 to 300,000 ppm.
CARCINOGEN:
Any
substance which tends to produce cancer in an organism.
CATIONS:
See
ion.
CELLULASE: An enzyme which
causes the decomposition of cellulose.
CELLULOSE
ACETATE:
A synthetic polymer derived from naturally occurring cellulose and widely used
in the fabrication of membranes. The polymers used for reverse osmosis membranes
may be diacetate, triacetate or blends of these materials.
CENTRIFUGAL PUMP: A pump containing a rotation impeller or rotating vanes mounted on a shaft in a casing and turned by a power source. The rotating impeller uses centrifugal force to deliver water in a steady steam.
CENTRIFUGE: A mechanical device that uses centrifugal or rotational forces to separate solids from liquids.
CHANNELING: The greater
flow of liquid through passages of lower resistance which can occur in fixed
beds or columns of particles(carbon, birm, etc.) due to non-uniform packing,
irregular sizes and shapes of the particles, gas pockets, wall effects and other
causes.
CHLORAMINES: Chemical complexes
formed from the reaction between ammonia and chlorine. They are presently being
used to disinfect municipal water supplies because unlike chlorine, they don't
combine with organics in the water to form potentially dangerous carcinogens
such as trihalomethanes (THM). Retains its bactericidal qualities for a longer
time than does free chlorine. Chloramines can exist in three forms, the proportions
of which depend on the physical and chemical properties of the water: Monochloramine;
Dichloramine; Nitrogen Trichloride. Water containing chloramines must not be
used for fish or kidney dialysis applications.
CHLORINE:
A
very toxic biocide. A halogen element isolated as a heavy irritating greenish-yellow
gas of pungent odor used especially as a bleach, oxidizing agent and a disinfectant
in water purification.
CHLORINATED
HYDROCARBONS: A
group of organic chemicals formed by reacting petroleum derived chemicals with
chlorine. Such chemicals include pesticides (insecticides) and herbicides and
are frequently potent carcinogens.
COAGULANT: A chemical
which causes dispersed colloidal particles to become destabilized, thereby aiding
in their removal during municipal water treatment. Aluminum and iron salts are
commonly used for this purpose.
COAGULATION: A practice
common in municipal water treatment in which a chemical (coagulant), most commonly
alum, is added to water in order to destabilize colloidal particles by neutralization
of their electrical charges. Coagulation is used, together with flocculation,
as a process for colloid removal.
COD: Chemical oxygen
demand
COLLOIDAL
MINERAL/COLLOID: Undissolved,
sub micron-sized suspended particles which are well dispersed in a solution
and will not readily settle out on standing. Most colloidal minerals are held
in suspension by their tiny size and/or a static electrical charge. Many colloidal
minerals claim to be organic due to the fact that they come from prehistoric
mineral deposits such as humic shale and that some of the minerals are bound
to carbon.
COMPACTION:
The
undesirable physical compression of a reverse osmosis or ultrafiltration membrane
which results in reduced flux rates. The phenomenon is accelerated at higher
temperatures and pressures.
CONCENTRATE: The portion of a feed stream that retains the ions, organics and suspended particles that were rejected during the cross flow filtration or purification process. Associated with water cooled distillers and reverse osmosis systems.
CONDENSATE: Water obtained
through distillation by evaporation and subsequent condensation.
CONDUCTIVITY: A measure of
the ability of an aqueous substance to transmit an electric current. The conductivity
imparted to water by dissolved solids is a function of both the amount and composition
of the salts and the temperature of the water.
DEIONIZATION: Removal of
ions from water by exchange with other ions associated with fixed charges on
a resin. First, positively charged ions are removed by a cation exchange resin
in exchange for a chemically equivalent amount of hydrogen ions. Second, negatively
charged ions are removed by an anion exchange resin for a chemically equivalent
amount of hydroxide ions. The hydrogen and hydroxide ions introduced in this
process unite to form water molecules. This process is also called demineralization
by ion exchange.
DEMINERALIZATION: The process of removing minerals from water e.g. deionization, reverse osmosis and distillation.
DESALINATION:
The
removal of dissolved inorganic solids(salts) from a solution such as water to
produce a liquid which is free of dissolved salts. Desalination is typically
accomplished by distillation, reverse osmosis or electrodialysis. A common source
water may be seawater.
DIALYSIS
DEMENTIA:
A severe, often fatal encephalopathy which has been attributed to accumulation
in the brain of aluminum from dialysate prepared with inadequately purified
water. May include consumption of tap water with high levels of alum used in
most municipal water treatment processes.
DISINFECTION: A process for
the destruction of bacteria. The process may be physical, as with heat or ultraviolet
irradiation, or chemical, as with chlorination.
DISSOLVED SOLIDS(ALSO TOTAL DISSOLVED SOLIDS-TDS): Includes colloidal and suspended particles at sizes far less than one micron in diameter. Associated with evaporation process such as distillation.
DISTILLATION: Steam from
boiling water is condensed on a cool surface, collected and stored. Most contaminants
do not vaporize and therefore do not pass to the condensate. Removes nearly
100 percent of salts and those organics that do not have a vaporizing temperature
near or below that of water. Usually combined with carbon filtration to remove
balance of remaining organics with vaporization temperatures below that of water.
DISTILLED
WATER:
Water which has been purified by passing through an evaporation, condensation
cycle; it generally contains less than 5 ppm of dissolved solids.
EFFLUENT: The output
stream exiting the system - often the waste stream.
EMPTY
BED CONTACT TIME:
A measurement of the duration of contact between water and the media through
which it is flowing, typically used in reference to carbon beds.
ENDOTOXIN:
Bacterial
lipopolysaccharide, a substance released from the cell walls of gram-negative
bacteria when the organism is broken down.
FERRIC IRON: Small solid iron particles containing trivalent iron, usually as gelatinous ferric hydroxide or ferric oxide, which are suspended in water and visible as "rusty water". Ferric iron can normally be removed by filtration. Also called "precipitated iron".
FERROUS IRON: A divalent iron ion, usually as ferrous bicarbonate which, when dissolved in water, produces a clear solution. It is usually removed by cation exchange water softening. Also called "clear water" iron.
FEED
WATER: Water
under pressure entering a purification system or an individual piece of purification
equipment, such as an ultra filter, distiller or reverse osmosis system.
FILTRATE: The portion of the feed stream that has passed through the membrane or filtering media.
FLOCCULENT:
Chemical
which, when added to water, causes particles to coagulate into larger, settle
able groupings. Aluminum compounds are common catalysts in this process.
FLOW
VELOCITY: A
quantitative expression of the rate of linear motion at which water passes through
a pipe or conduit.
FLUIDIZATION:
A
process by which particles are suspended by an upward flow of liquid, such as
may occur during back washing of ion exchange resin or carbon media.
FLUORIDE: A salt of hydrofluoric
acid which may occur naturally in water supplies or be added by municipal processes
for the prevention of dental caries. Fluoride is considered toxic in most medical
settings and has been implicated with a wide range of physiological disorders
including renal bone disease.
FLUX/FLUX
RATE: The
rate per unit of area at which water passes through a semi-permeable membrane,
such as those used for ultrafiltration or reverse osmosis.
FOULING: The deposition
of insoluble materials, such as bacteria, colloids, oxides and water-borne debris,
onto the surface of a media such as water softening resins, reverse osmosis
or ultrafiltration membrane. Fouling is associated with decreased flux rates
and may also reduce the rejection rates of reverse osmosis membranes.
FULVIC
ACIDS: Acidic
substances which are found in humic (organic) soils and which may become suspended
in water. A component in the production of chloramines.
FUNGUS:
A
parasitic plant which produces no chlorophyll and is dependent on other life
forms for its existence.
GLAUCONITE
SAND: A
mineral which is frequently used in depth filters.
GPD: gallons per day.
GPG: grains per
gallon. Equivalent to 17.1 milligrams/liter of calcium carbonate.
HARDNESS: The amount
of calcium and magnesium in the water in grains per gallon, (expressed as calcium
carbonate). This level is important to control during distillation or reverse
osmosis processes to prevent scaling. Each grain is equal to 17.1 ppm of calcium
and magnesium (expressed as calcium carbonate).
What constitutes truly "hard" water is subject to much debate and controversy. Proponents of water softening systems tend to call water "hard" which contains between 3 and 10 grains of hardness. Unfortunately, this definition is supported by the American Society of Agricultural Engineers and the Water Quality Association, major supporters of the water softening industry.
Water with 10 grains of hardness is regularly used by consumers with little or no adverse affect on plumbing or other household functions. Water which approaches 15 to 20 grains is more in line with situations which require water softening or conditioning. Water with 3 grains of hardness and is termed "moderately hard" by these organizations is typically found in surface and spring water sources, far removed from what one would consider hard water sources.
HEAVY
METALS:
Metals having a high density or specific gravity. A generic term used to classify
contaminants such as cadmium, lead and mercury. These contaminants can damage
living things even at low concentrations and tend to accumulate n the food chain.
HOMOGENEOUS
MEMBRANES: See
membranes.
HYDROGEN SULFIDE: A toxic gas that is detectable by a strong "rotten egg" odor. Associated with high levels of bacterial decay. Commonly found together with iron and manganese contaminants.
HYDROLOGIC
CYCLE:
The term used to describe how water travels through the environment by evaporation,
condensation and precipitation. Identical process is observed in steam distillation
systems.
HYDROLYSIS: A chemical
process resulting from reactions with water; frequently used in reference to
the breakdown of polymers.
HYDROPHILIC: Pertaining
to a substance which readily absorbs water ("water-loving").
HYDROPHOBIC:
Pertaining
to a substance which does not readily absorb water ("water-hating").
ION:
An
atom or molecule having either a positive or negative electrical charge. Positively
charged ions are referred to as cations and ions having a negative charge are
termed anions.
ION
EXCHANGE: A
process by which certain ionized chemicals present in water are replaced with
other ionized chemicals temporarily attached to resin particles. The exchange
process is made only for ions having the same charge.
IRON: A very common element often present in ground water in amounts ranging from 0.01 to 10.0 ppm(mg/l). Iron may be found in three forms: in soluble forms such as in ferrous bicarbonate; bound with a soluble organic compound; or as suspended ferric iron particles. Iron above 0.3 mg/l is objectionable to water because of staining of laundry and plumbing fixtures.
IRON BACTERIA: Bacteria which thrive on iron and are able to actually use ferrous iron(as found in water or steel pipes) in their metabolic processes to incorporate ferric iron in their cell structure and to deposit gelatinous ferric hydroxide iron compounds in their life processes.
LAMINAR: Non turbulent fluid flow. Associated with fluid dynamics and designs of fluid tubing and pipelines.
LANGELIER SATURATION INDEX: A calculated number used to predict the calcium carbonate(CaCO3) stability of a water; whether a water will precipitate, dissolve, or be in equilibrium with, calcium carbonate. It is sometimes erroneously assumed that any water that tends to dissolve calcium carbonate is automatically corrosive.
Langelier
saturation index = pH - pH, where pH = actual pH of the water, and pH, = pH
at which the water having the same alkalinity and calcium content is just saturated
with calcium carbonate.
LIGNIN: A polysaccharide
found in the cell walls of plants; a breakdown product of decaying vegetation
which may be present in surface water supplies.
MEMBRANES: Thin films
constructed of cellulosic or synthetic materials which are designed to provide
selective transport of solutes. Widely used for hemodialysis, micro filtration,
ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis, membranes may be either homogeneous or
asymmetric. Homogeneous membranes have a uniform structure or cross-section
while asymmetric membranes have a dense "skin" which overlays a porous
substructure.
METHEMOGLOBINEMIA: The presence
in blood of methemoglobin, a substance related to normal oxyhemoglobin but having
no oxygen-carrying capabilities and induced by exposure of blood to certain
toxic chemicals, such as nitrites.
MICRO
FILTRATION:
The separation or removal from a liquid of particulates and micro-organisms
in the size range of 0.1 to 2 microns in diameter.
MICRON: A unit of linear
measure. It is one millionth of a meter, or one thousandth of a millimeter.
The smallest particle than can be distinguished by the naked eye would be about
40 microns across.
MICRON
RATING:
A measurement applied to filters or filter media to indicate the particle size
at which a substantial percentage of suspended solids above that size will be
removed. As used in the water treatment industry standards, this may be an absolute
rating or a nominal rating.
MICRO
POROUS: In
the context of water purification, membranes having an average pore size which
is between 0.1 and 1.0 microns in diameter.
MICROWATT-SECONDS PER SQUARE CENTIMETER: A unit of measurement of intensity and retention or contact time in the operation of ultraviolet(U/V) systems.
Mg/l: Milligrams per liter. A measure of concentration of a dissolved substance. A concentration of one mg/l means that one milligram of a substance is dissolved in each liter of water. For practical purposes, this unit is equal to parts per million(ppm) since one liter of water is equal in weight to one million milligrams. Thus, a liter of water containing 10 milligrams of calcium has 10 parts of calcium per one million parts of water or 10 parts per million(10 ppm).
MICROHM:
One
millionth of an ohm. The unit of measurement for testing the electrical resistance
of water to determine its purity. The closer water comes to absolute purity,
the greater its resistance to conduction of an electrical current. Absolute
pure water has a specific resistance over 18 million ohms(megohms) across one
centimeter of water at a temperature of 78 degrees Fahrenheit.
MILLILITERS/MINUTE: A common measurement
for the flow rate of small RO systems. Usually measured with a graduate cylinder.
One thousandth of a liter per minute. Milliliters/min x.38 = gal/day.
MIXED
BED:
The intermix of two or more filter or ion exchange products in the same vessel
during a service run. The most common use is in ion exchange systems having
a 40/60 percent cation to anion resin bed such as that for a deionization polisher
system. In filtration, there may be an intermix of two or more media in a single
tank with each stratified into separate layers.
MONOVALENT
ION: A
cation or anion having a single electrical charge.
MTBE:(Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether): A volatile organic chemical(VOC) used as an octane-enhancing lead substitute and more recently as an oxygenating agent in gasoline to reduce carbon monoxide emissions from automobiles. MTBE is volatile, flammable and highly soluble in water.
During refueling and gasoline production, MTBE is volatilized to the atmosphere where it dissolves into the atmospheric moisture and returns to earth as precipitation, polluting our water supplies. Since MTBE does not adsorb well with organic matter in soils it is easily washed away. In surface water, MTBE volatilizes into the air while in ground water, MTBE persists and moves freely. MTBE occurrences in ground water above 40 ppb have so far been attributed to point source contamination such as underground gasoline tank leaks, overflows, etc.
EPA has tentatively classified MTBE as a potential human carcinogen.
NANOFILTRATION: A membrane treatment process which falls between reverse osmosis and ultrafiltration on the filtration/separation spectrum. The nanofiltration process can pass more water at lower pressure operations than reverse osmosis, can remove particles in the 300 to 1,000 molecular weight range such as humic acid and organic color bodies present in water, and can reject selected(typically polyvalent) salts. Nanofiltration may be used for selective removal of hardness ions in a process known as membrane softening.
NEUTRALIZATION:
The
addition of either an acid to a base or a base to an acid to produce a more
nearly neutral solution. The use of alkaline or basic materials to neutralize
acidity of some water is common practice in water processing to prevent corrosion
of metallic home plumbing.
NITRATE: An anion comprised
of one nitrogen atom and three oxygen atoms. Nitrates are considered toxic in
hemodialysis water and are also harmful to infants when consumed orally.
NOMINAL FILTER RATING: Filter rating indicating the approximate size particle, the majority of which will not pass through the filter. It is generally interpreted as meaning that 85 percent of the particles of the size equal to the nominal filter rating will be retained by the filter.
OPERATING PRESSURE: The manufacturer's specified range of pressure expressed in pounds per square inch(psi) within which a water processing device or water system is designed to function.
OPERATING
TEMPERATURE: The
manufacturer's recommend feed water or inlet water temperature for a water treatment
system.
OSMOSIS: The natural
tendency of water to pass through a semipermeable membrane, so as to equalize
concentrations on both sides of the membrane.
OSMOTIC
PRESSURE: The
force (pressure) resulting when two liquids having different solute concentrations
are separated by a semi-permeable membrane. For every 100 ppm, an osmotic "back
pressure" of 1 psi is generated and this "back pressure" must
be overcome in the reverse osmosis process.
OSTEODYSTROPHY: Abnormal bone
development which, in renal patients, may be attributed to parathyroid gland
dysfunction and is characterized by high serum phosphorus and alkaline phosphates
and low serum calcium levels.
OSTEOMALACIA: A softening
of bone due to an accumulation of osteoid and reduced mineralization which may
cause fractures with minimal stress.
OSTEOPOROSIS: Demineralization
of bone which may cause fractures with minimal stress.
OXIDANTS(OXIDIZING
AGENTS):
Chemicals which provide oxygen and accept an electron in an oxidation-reduction
reaction. Free chlorine and chloramines are oxidants which are widely used for
disinfection.
OXIDIZING
FILTERS: Filters
that use a catalytic media, such as managanous oxides or potassium permangenate,
to oxidize iron, manganese and other impurities from water.
OZONE:
An
extremely active oxidizing agent and bacteriocide which consists of three oxygen
atoms. It is formed by the action of a high voltage electrical field on oxygen
or air(such as occurs during an electrical storm). Some degree of ozone can
also be produced by certain types of ultraviolet lamps.
PERMEABLE:
Allowing
some material to pass through.
PERMEATE:
See
product water.
PARTS
PER MILLION (ppm):
The standard measure of total dissolved solids. Parts of dissolved material
in one million parts of water. (eg. one pound of mineral salts dissolved in
a million pounds of water would be on part per million).
Pascal(Pa): A unit of pressure equal to one newton of force per square meter. One thousand pascals equal one kilopascal(KPa); a kilopascal equals 0.145 pounds per square inch. Alternatively, 1 psi = 6895 Pa = 6.895 kN/sq.m = 0.0703 kg/sq.cm.
PATHOGENS: Micro-organism
that can cause disease in other organisms or in humans, animals and plants.
They may be bacteria, viruses or parasites and are found in sewage, in runoff
from animals and in water used for swimming. Fish and shellfish contaminated
by pathogens, or the contaminated water itself, can cause serious illness.
pH:
The
balance between the strength of the alkaline and acidic compounds in water.
At a pH of 7.0 acid strength and alkaline strength are equal, and the water
is neutral. Less than 7 is more acidic. Greater than 7 is more alkaline. On
a logarithmic scale of 1 to 14, it is the negative logarithm of hydrogen ion
concentration.
PHENOLS: Weak aromatic
acids which are indicative of industrial pollution of water supplies. When combined
with chlorine, they produce an objectionable taste and odor.
POLYAMIDE: A synthetic
polymer of the nylon family used in the fabrication of reverse osmosis and ultrafiltration
membranes.
POLYMERS: A chemical
compound with many repeating structural units.
POLYSULFONE:
A
synthetic polymer used to fabricate reverse osmosis and ultrafiltration membranes
which are characterized by extreme thermal stability and chemical resistance.
Popular in dental waterline filtration systems.
POLYVALENT
ION:
A cation or anion having a multiple electrical charge.
POLYVINYL
CHLORIDE: A
thermoplastic piping material produced by the polymerization of vinyl chloride.
PORE: An opening
in a membrane which allows certain components to pass through, but not others.
POTASSIUM
PERMANGANATE: An
oxidizing agent commonly used for the regeneration of manganese green sand iron
filters and occasionally used as a disinfectant.
PPB: Parts per billion(equivalent to micrograms per liter)
PPM: Parts per million(equivalent
to milligrams per liter)
PRESSURE
DROP:
Sometimes referred to as "delta P", it is the decrease in hydrostatic
force (pressure) due to the effects of friction or restrictions on a flowing
liquid.
PRESSURE
HEAD:
The vertical distance(in feet) equal to the pressure(in psi) at a specific point.
The pressure head is equal to the pressure in psi times 2.31 ft/psi.
PRIORITY
POLLUTANTS:
Those pollutants that pose the most serious health hazards determined by the
EPA (Environmental Protection Agency).
PRODUCT
WATER: The
purified water stream from equipment, such as distillation, reverse osmosis
and ultra filter units.
PSI:
Pounds
per square inch(pressure)
PYROLOSIS: A breakdown
process which occurs when organic matter is subjected to elevated temperatures.
RADIAL
FLOW:
The flow pattern in which water flows from the outside of a filter element to
the center core. For example, a replaceable particulate or carbon cartridge
filter unit.
RECOVERY(PERCENT
RECOVERY): A
measurement applied to distillation, reverse osmosis and ultrafiltration equipment
which characterizes the ratio of product water to feed water flow rates. The
measurement is descriptive of distillation reverse osmosis or ultrafiltration
equipment as a system and not of individual membrane elements. Expressed as
a , recovery is defined as: % Recovery = (Product flow rate/Feed flow rate)
x 100.
REGENERATION:
Carried
out using either an acid or alkali to remove the accumulated cations or anions,
respectively from a filtration media. At the same time, the cation exchanger
takes on hydrogen ions to restore themselves to the original hydrogen or hydroxide
form, respectively.
REJECTION(PERCENT
REJECTION):
A measure of the ability of a reverse osmosis membrane to remove salts. Expressed
as a percentage, rejection is defined as:
Rejection = (l-Product concentration/Feed concentration) x 100.
RESIN:
Specially
manufactured polymer beads used in the ion exchange process to remove dissolved
salts from water.
REVERSE
OSMOSIS:
A reversal of the natural phenomenon of osmosis brought about by application
of hydraulic pressure greater than the osmotic pressure in water (containing
dissolved solids) to cause the water molecules to flow through the membrane
away from the dissolved substances.
RYZNAR
INDEX:
A modification of the Langelier index used to calculate the degree of calcium
carbonate saturation and to predict the likelihood of scale formation from a
water supply.
SALT
PASSAGE RATE:
A measurement of the passage of salts through a reverse osmosis membrane. Salt
passage is related to rejection by: % Salt passage = 100 - % Rejection.
SCALING: Usually used
in reference to distillation or reverse osmosis equipment, scaling is the precipitation
of sparingly soluble salts, such as calcium carbonate, onto the surface of a
distiller boiler or reverse osmosis membrane. Scaling is associated with decreased
flux and reduced reverse osmosis rejection rates. Scaling also effects to a
slight degree the efficiency of distillation processes.
SEDIMENTATION: The process
by which solids are separated from water by gravity and deposited on the bottom
of a container or basin.
SEMIPERMEABLE: Descriptive
of a material, such as a reverse osmosis or ultrafiltration membrane, which
allows the passage of some molecules and prevents the passage of others.
SILT
DENSITY INDEX: A
measurement of the rate at which a 0.45 ~m filter disc is plugged under standardized
test conditions. Silt density index (SDI) determinations are used to estimate
the rate at which various water supplies will cause fouling or pluggage of reverse
osmosis or ultrafiltration membranes.
SOFT
WATER:
Water containing less than 1 grain per gallon dissolved calcium and magnesium
salts. Definition of where softness starts may vary depending on
individual viewpoints
SOLUTE: Dissolved particles
in a solvent
SORBENT: See adsorption.
SPIRAL
WOUND MEMBRANE: The
most common practical configuration of membranes for RO systems.
STERILIZATION: A physical
or chemical process that reduces the number of organisms to a safe predetermined
level (see also disinfection).
SUPERFICIAL
VELOCITY:
A quantitative expression of the rate of linear motion with which water passes
through a vessel used to house particles, such as ion exchange resin or carbon
media.
SURGE
TANK:
A type of pressurized water storage vessel. Surge tanks typically have large
areas of stagnation that offer opportunistic bacteria a favorable environment
for multiplication. Commonly found in reverse osmosis systems. Requires periodic
sanitation to ensure control of bacterial growth.
SUSPENDED SOLIDS: Includes settleable particles less than one micron in diameter.
TANNIN: Any of a group of water soluble, natural organic phenolic compounds that are produced by metabolism in trees and plants and are part of the degradation-resistant fulvic acid materials formed during the decomposition of vegetation.
Tannins
occur in water or in almost any location where large quantities of vegetation
have decayed. Tannins can impart a faintly yellowish to brown color to water.
Tannin molecules tend to form anions in water above pH 6 and can be treated
with anion exchange resins. Below pH 5, tannins are better treated with activated
carbon.
THIN
FILM COMPOSITE:
A membrane made with a polyamide based polymer consisting of three layers: a
polyester support web, a micro porous polysulfonic inter layer, and an ultrathin
barrier coating on the top surface.
TITRATABLE
ALKALINITY:
The quantity of hydrogen ions (H+) which must be added to a sample of alkaline
water in order to establish a condition of neutrality.
TOTAL
DISSOLVED SOLIDS:
The sum of all ions in a solution, often approximated by means of electrical
conductivity or resistivity measurements. Total dissolved solids (TDS) measurements
are commonly used to assess distiller and reverse osmosis unit performance.
It
is important to note that a test measuring the electrical conductivity of the
water sample provides only an estimate of the TDS present, as conductivity is
not precisely proportional to the weight of an ion and nonconductive substances
cannot be measured by electrical tests.
TOTAL
ORGANIC CARBON:
A measurement of the total mass of dissolved carbon in a water sample, excluding
that originating from carbon dioxide and carbonates.
TOTAL
SUSPENDED SOLIDS: The
particles which can be removed from a solution by filtration, usually specified
as the matter which will not pass through a 0.45 micron pore-diameter filter.
TURBIDITY:
A
measurement of the amount of suspended solids (colloids) in a solution. Caused
by stirred-up sediment, silt, clay, etc. Turbidity blocks light rays and makes
the water opaque. Turbidity is measured in nephelometric turbidity units(NTU).
Potable
water should not exceed 0.3 NTU. Turbidity cannot be directly equated to suspended
solids because white particles reflect more light than dark-colored particles
and many small particles will reflect more light than an equivalent large particle.
ULTRA
FILTERS:
A membrane based filtration system in which the pore sizes range from 0.002
to 0.1 microns.
ULTRAVIOLET(UV)
LIGHT:
Radiation(light) having a wavelength shorter than 3900 angstroms, the wavelength
of visible light and longer than 100 angstroms, the wavelengths of x-rays. This
wvelength puts ultraviolet light at the invisible violet end of the light spectrum.
UV light is used as a disinfectant. Water treated by ultraviolet light should
be free from particulate materials or turbidity so as to prevent micro-organisms
from being shielded from the incident UV radiation.
VIRUS: The smallest
infectious microorganism, made of RNA or DNA in a protein shell and which grow
only in other, living cells. They are 0.004 to 0.1 microns in size and about
100 times smaller than bacteria.
WATER HAMMER: The shock wave or series of waves caused by the resistance of inertia to an abrupt change of water flow through a water piping system. Water hammer may produce an instantaneous pressure many times greater than the normal pressure. For this reason, many building codes now require the installation of a "water hammer arrestor" or accumulation device to absorb shock waves and prevent damage to appliances such as washing machines as well as water treatment components such as reverse osmosis membranes.
WATER SOFTENER: A pressurized water treatment device in which hard water is passed through a bed of cation exchange media for the purpose of exchanging calcium and magnesium ions for sodium or potassium ions, thus producing a "softened" water which is more desirable for laundering, bathing and dish washing. This cation exchange process was originally called zeolite water softening or the Permutit Process. Most modern water softeners use a sulfonated bead form of styrene/divinylbenzene(DVB) cation resin.
