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GLOSSARY-
COMPREHENSIVE
Alphabetical Target
A B
C D E F
G H I J
K L M N
O P Q R
S T
U
V W Z
Anaerobic digestion
Digestion of organic matter by anaerobic microbial action, resulting in
the production of methane gas.
Anaerobiosis
The presence of life in an anaerobic environment.
Anion exchange capacity
The ability to exchange positively charged particles of two or more
compounds, measured in milliequivalents per 100 grams.
Aquaclude
Rocks and soils which transmit water with difficulty, e.g. clay, shale and
unfractured granite.
Aquifer
Rocks and soils which transmit water with ease through their pores and
fractures, e.g. limestone, sandstone and fractured granite.
Attached growth
Fixed microbial growth on the media surface in a trickling filter.
Attentuate and disperse
landfill sites The traditional
type of landfill site from which the leachate produced seeps through soil
assures and pores into the underlying saturated zone, where it is diluted.
Attrition
A gradual abrasion.
Autotrophic
A term applied to organisms which produce their own organic constituents
from inorganic compounds utilizing energy from sunlight or oxidation
processes.
Available water content
The water available in the soil for plant use, i.e. the difference between
the permanent wilting point and the field capacity.
Avogadro number
The number of atoms of carbon in exactly twelve grams of the carbon-12
isotope, i.e. 6.023x1023.
Bag
filter A row of fabric bags
through which a gas stream is passed for the removal of particulate
matter.
Baseflow
Water which enters streams from persistent, slowly varying sources and
maintains streamflow between water-input events.
Basidia
The reproduction cell of the fungal group, Basidiomycetes. which
contains the mushroom puffballs and rust.
Benzene ring
The basic structure of benzene: six carbon atoms arranged in a ring, each
with a hydrogen atom attached.
Binary fission
A
form of reproduction of micro-organisms in which the cell mass is passed
on as two new individuals to the succeeding generation and the biomass is
retained within the population.
Biochemical oxygen demand
(BOD) A measure of the amount of
oxygen used by bacteria in the
Biocide
A chemical toxic or lethal to living organisms.
Biodegradable
Capable of decomposition by living matter.
Biodiversity
The infinite range of living organisms found within an ecosystem.
Biome
A major regional ecological community, characterized by distinct life
forms and principal plant or animal species.
Biosolids
The semi-solid end product of wastewater treatment.
Biosphere
The part of the earth and the atmosphere in which life can occur.
Biotope
The smallest geographical unit of the biosphere or of a habitat,
characterized by its biota, that can be defined by convenient boundaries.
Bound water
A thin film of water held by adhesion to the surface of soil particles.
Buoyancy
The
upward force that acts on a body which is totally immersed in a fluid and
is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the body.
Bubbling bed
Expansion
and fluidization of the sand of a fluid-bed incinerator caused by high
rate passage of air.
Budding
A type of asexual reproduction in which new cells are formed as outgrowths
of a parent cell.
Buffer
A solution which undergoes only a slight change in pH when H+
or OH- ions are added to it.
Buffer stripping
The cultivation of narrow strips of land across the slope of the land
rather than parallel to it, with the aim of reducing soil erosion.
Can
velocity The velocity of the gas
in the passages between the filter units in the filter house of a gas
filter.
Capilliarity
The rise of water in tubes of small bore due to the adhesion between the
water molecules and the surface of the vessel wall.
Capilliary suction time
(CST) A laboratory-determinable
parameter defining the dewaterability rate of a wastewater sludge.
Capilliary water
Water held in soil micropores by weak capilliary forces.
Capsid
A protein coat surrounding the nucleic acid of a simple virus.
Capsule
A layer of well-organized materials lying outside and adhering to the
bacterial cell wall.
Carotenes
See carotenoids.
Carotenoids
A group of plant pigments of an orange, yellow or red color which assist
in photosynthesis, absorb light in the violet – blue range but whose
presence is usually masked by chlorophyll. They contain the groups
carotenes and xanthophylls.
Catalyst
A substance which alters the rate of a chemical reaction but which is not
used up and is unchanged chemically at the end of the reaction.
Catchment
A natural drainage basin which channels rainfall into a single outflow.
Cation
A positively charged ion.
Cation exchange capacity
The ability to exchange negatively charged particles of two or more
compounds, measured in milliequivalents per 100 grams.
Cavity zone
A region within which there is little mixing of air.
Cellular storm
A rainfall event consisting of a number of discreet rainfall-bearing cells
(clouds).
Cell wall
The outer supporting layer of a plant cell made by the protoplast and
consisting largely of cellulose.
Chemical oxygen demand
(COD) A quick chemical test to
measure the oxygen equivalent of the organic matter content of wastewater
that is susceptible to oxidation by a strong chemical.
Chemisorption
Adsorption
involving very strong bonding forces
Chemotrophic
A
term applied to organisms which produce their own organic constituents
from inorganic compounds utilizing the energy obtained from the oxidation
of hydrogen sulphide.
Chloracne
A widespread acneform eruption due to exposure to compounds such as
dibenzofurans, dibenzodioxins and chlorodiphenyls.
Chloramine
A compound composed of chlorine and ammonia.
Chlorination
A disinfection technique used in water treatment, involving the addition
of Cl2 gas, chlorine dioxide, sodium hypochlorite or calcium
hypochlorite.
Chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs) Compounds containing
chlorine, fluorine or bromine, used as aerosol propellants, refrigerants,
foaming agents and solvents and which, on decomposition by sunlight,
produce oxides of chlorine responsible for the removal of ozone from the
stratosphere.
Chlorophyll
A photosynthetic plant pigment which absorbs red and blue light but
reflects green light. The chlorophyll molecule has a square head,
magnesium at the center and a long tail.
Chlorophyll a
The most important of the pigments in chlorophyll, found in all
photosynthetic plants except bacteria.
Chlorophyll b
One of the constituent pigments of chlorophyll, found in higher plants and
green algae.
Chloroplast
A chlorophyll-containing, cytoplasmic body of plant cells where
photosynthesis occurs.
Chromatophore
A plastic containing colored pigment.
Cilia
Whiplike structures of 5 – 20 µm length which allows bacterial mobility
by beating with a swimming action.
Circulating bed
Recovery of solids from the gas phase of a fluidized bed combustion
reactor, followed by reinjection into the sand bed.
Closed loop recycling
The remanufacture of a new product from a retired product of the same
type.
Coagulation
The water/wastewater treatment process of destabilizing colloidal
particles to facilitate particle growth during flocculation by either
double-layer compression, charge neturalization, interparticle bridging or
precipitate enmeshment.
Coarse fish
Fish, e.g. mullet, which are able to tolerate low oxygen levels.
Coepod species
A phylum containing the Crustacea, i.e. small freshwater and marine
animals, of which some plankton is composed.
Conductivity
A measure of the ability of a solution to conduct an electrical current
and is proportional to the concentration of ions in the solution.
Coliforms
Non-pathogenic
bacteria present in the intestines of warm-blooded animals, water and
wastewater, whose numbers indicate contamination.
Colloids
Very small particles in suspension, e.g. clays.
Combustion
A high temperature process involving the decomposition of organics in an
excess of air.
Completely mixed reactor
An aeration tank in which, on entering, the influent wastewater is
dispersed immediately throughout the reactor volume.
Composting
The biological stabilization of wastes of biological origin under
controlled conditions.
Compound
A substance, the molecules of which consist of two or more different kinds
of atoms.
Compression settling
Particles are present in such a high concentration that they touch each
other and settling can occur only by compression of the particle mass.
Condensation point
That level above the earth’s surface to which a parcel of unsaturated
air must ascend before becoming saturated.
Constructed wetland
A biological wastewater treatment system which utilizes plants for the
degradation of organic waste.
Contact stabilization
A wastewater treatment plant in which there are two tanks, one for the
adsorption of organic matter onto the suspended solids and another for
oxidation of the adsorbed materials.
Containment landfill
sites The modern landfill site,
in which the leachate generated is contained by bottom liners, collected
and treated.
Contaminated site
A
landfill into which hazardous polluting waste has been dumped.
Contour ploughing
Ploughing
across the slope of the land rather than with it, to prevent soil erosion.
Convection
Transport
of heat by vertical movement of a heated body.
Convective precipitation
When a parcel of air which is less dense than the air surrounding it,
rises, it
cools and loses moisture
which falls to the earth as rain.
Coriolis force
A transverse force, caused by the movement of the earth about the sun,
which causes a build-up in the level of water to the right of a tidal
current in the northern hemisphere and to the left in the southern
hemisphere.
Corona
The upper portion of a body part.
Criteria pollutant
Emissions to the urban air traditionally seen as polluting, e.g. carbon
monoxide (CO2), sulfur dioxide (SO4).
Cryogenic
Producing very low temperatures.
Cyanide
A highly poisonous salt of hydrocyanic acid, used frequently in the
extraction of gold and silver.
Cyclone separator
A means of purifying an air stream by using both gravitational and
centrifugal forces.
Cytotoxic
Damaging to cell structure and cell division
.Daphnid species
The phylum containing the Branchiopodia, i.e. marine solitary, benthic
animals with a shell of two valves.
Denitrification
The chemical reduction of nitrate and nitrite to gaseous forms: nitric
oxide, nitrous oxide and dinitrogen: NO3- à NO2-à
NO à N2 Oà N2
Deoxyribose nucleic acid (DNA)
A large organic molecule found in the cell nucleus, containing a phosphate
group, five-carbon sugars (deoxyribose) and four different nitrogenous
bases in a repetitive structure.
Detritivores
Organisms which feed on fragmented particulate organic matter.
Dewatering of sludge
A mechanical unit operation which increases the dry solids concentration
of the sludge from 3.9 percent after digestion to 25 – 30 percent
thereby ensuring that the sludge effectively behaves as a solid for
handling purposes.
Diffusion
The process by which gases and liquids spread themselves throughout any
space into which they are put.
Dilute-phase bed
The stage in fluidized bed combustion at which the bubbling of the reactor
bed becomes so great that the boundary between the bed and the gas above
it becomes indistinct.
Dimiclic
A term to describe a lake whose thermocline is disrupted due to two
periods of free circulation or overturn per year in the lake.
Dioxin
Tetrachlorodibenzoparadioxin (TCDD), a highly toxic and environmentally
persistent product of the manufacture of the pesticide 2,4,5-T.
Direct contact condenser
The vapor stream is in direct contact with the drying medium, hot air or
gas. The drying medium (hot air or flue gas) leaves the drier with the
water vapor coming from the sludge. The drying temperature is 80 – 150
ºC.
Directivity index
The difference between the measured sound power level and the value based
on the assumption of uniform radiation in all directions.
Discrete settling
Particles settle as independent units, without interaction of flocs.
Disinfection
The removal or inactivation of pathogenic organisms.
Dissolved oxygen
A measure of the amount of oxygen dissolved in water, expressed as either:
(i) mg/1 – which is the absolute amount
of oxygen dissolved in the water mass
(ii) as percentage saturation of the
water with O2 (% sat)
Dissolved solids
The total colloidal and suspended solids in a liquid. Any particle passing
a 1.2 µm filter is defined as dissolved.
Dominant group
The highest ranking group in a social order of dominance sustained by
aggressive or other behavioural patterns.
Downflow column
e.g. Sand filtration where water flows through the filter by gravity. Also
used in anaerobic digestion, where the wastewater enters at the upper
levels and flows down through a packed medium. Opposite to upflow column.
Downwash
The
drawdown of a plume after emission due to a low pressure area downwind of
the stack.
Dry absorption
A method of controlling acids in flue gas emissions, by injection of dry
calcium
hydroxide into the gases leaving the
furnace of an incinerator.
Dry weather flow
The
combination of wastewater and dry weather infiltration flowing in a
sanitary
sewer during times of low precipitation.
Ecology
That branch of science dealing with living organisms and their
surroundings.
Ecosystem
A community of interdependent organisms together with the environment
which they inhabit
and with which they interact, e.g. a
pond.
Ecotron
A controlled, in-house, ecological experiment to recreate a particular
ecosystem.
ECU
The EU unit of monetary currency.
Effluent
The outflow from a sewage treatment plant.
Electrical double layer
A name given to the combination of the Stern layer and the diffused layer
of
both negatively and positively charged
ions which surround it.
Electron
Negatively charged particle contained within an atom, the weight of which
is about two
thousand times less than that of the
hydrogen atom.
Electrostatic precipitation
A
means of purifying an air stream by attraction and adhesion of ionized
particles to an electrode.
Element
A substance, the molecules of which have all the same atoms.
Endotoxin
An environmental toxin which attacks the endocrine glands, i.e. kidney,
liver, etc.
Environmental impact assessment (EIA)
A review to which all commencing projects must be
subjected with regard to their impact on
the environment.
Enzyme
A substance produced by living cells which acts like a catalyst in
promoting reactions within
the organism.
Epilimnion
The zone in a stratified lake just below the near-surface water in which
temperature
decreases rapidly with depth.
Epilithic
Relating to organisms growing on rocks or on other hard, inorganic
substances.
Equilibrium concentration
The concentration of the dissociated ions when the rates of both backward
and forward reactions are equal.
Equilization basin
A holding tank within which variations in sewage inflow rate and liquid
nutrient
concentrations are averaged.
Equivalence
The number of protons donated in an acid-base reaction or the total change
in valence in
an oxidation-reduction reaction.
Eucaryotic cell
A
cell whose nucleus is enclosed by a membrane, e.g. algae, higher plants
and animals.
Euphotic zone
The
surface zone of large lakes through which sufficient light penetrates for
photo-
synthesis to occur.
European Communities (EC)
A precursor to the EU, created by the merger of the European Coal and
Steel Community, the European Economic
Community and the European Atomic Energy
Community.
European Economic Community (EEC)
An organization established in 1957 under the Treaty of
Rome to co-ordinate the activities of its
member countries in the coal and steel industry, the
establishment of a common market and the
pooling of atomic energy resources.
European Union (EU)
A supranational organization which replaced the EEC in 1993, with the
objective of peace and prosperity for
its members by achieving complete economic and political union.
Eurytopic
A term describing an organism which is tolerant of a wide range of
habitats.
Eurotrophic
A term describing freshwater bodies which are rich in plant nutrients and
therefore highly
productive.
Eutrophication
An
increase in the concentration of nutrients in an aquatic ecosystem,
causing:
(i) the increased productivity of
autotrophic green plants, leading to the blocking out of sunlight
(ii) elevated temperatures within the
water body
(iii) depletion of the world’s
oxygen resources
(iv) increased agal growth
(v) reduction in the level of and
variety of fish and animal
Evaporation
The
changing of liquid water from rivers, lakes, bare soil and vegetative
surfaces into
water vapor.
Evapotranspiration
A collective term for all the processes by which water in the liquid or
solid phase
at or near the earth’s land surfaces
becomes atmospheric water vapor.
Exothermic reaction
A chemical reaction during which heat is liberated.
Extended aeration
Involves an aeration period of more than 24 hours and a high rate of
return sludge to
allow cell decay during the endogenous
respiration phase of the growth curve.
Facultative
aerobes/anaerobes Having the
ability to live either with or without oxygen.
Fickian diffusion
Molecular diffusion, governed by Fick’s law, which says that the rate of
flow of
molecules across a unit area of a certain
plane is directly proportional to the concentration gradient.
Field capacity
The amount of water which can be held in the soil against the force of
gravity, i.e. Water
which will not drain freely out of the
soil.
Filtration
A process whereby suspended and colloidal matter is removed from water and
wastewater by
passage through a granular medium.
Five-day biochemical oxygen demand (BOD5)
A measure of the amount of oxygen used by bacteria to
degrade organic matter in a sample of
wastewater over a 5 day period at 20 ºC, expressed in mg 1-1.
Fixed bed
A bed of dry carbon which recovers volatile organic carbons from an air
stream.
Flagellae
Whiplike
structures of 100 – 200 µm length which allow bacterial mobility by
undulating in
planar or helical waves.
Flash point
The lowest temperature at which a flammable vapor/air mixture exists at
the surface of a
combustible liquid.
Flocculation
The water treatment process in which particle collisions are induced in
order to encourage
the growth of larger particles.
Flotation
A process by which suspended matter is lifted to the surface of a liquid
to facilitate its
removal. Frequently done by the bubbling
of air through the liquid.
Flow duration curve
A
means of summarizing temporal variability by averaging precipitation over
a
selected time period.
Flowing well
When
the groundwater is flowing in a confined aquifer, it is under hydrostatic
pressure.
Should a standpipe be inserted into the
aquifer, the water will rise in the standpipe.
Flue gases
Gas by-products of the incineration process whose temperature is a measure
of incinerator
efficiency and whose constituents may be
polluting.
Flue gas scrubber
Equipment used for the removal of suspended particulates and acid gases
from flue
gas emissions.
Fluidized bed combustion
An incineration technique in which waste is destroyed by combustion on a
bubbling bed.
Fluoridation
The addition of fluoride to drinking water within the limits 0.7 – 1.2
mg/1-1 to help
prevent the occurrence of tooth decay.
Foaming agent
Anti-foaming chemicals added to wastewater in the aeration tank to
disperse the
contaminating foam caused by the action
of the surface aerators and the presence of detergents in
the wastewater.
Food/micro-organism ratio (F/M)
A measure of the organic loading rate of a wastewater treatment
system, i.e. the ratio between the daily
BOD load and the quantity of activated sludge in the system
(microbes).
Fugitive emissions
Emissions
from non-point sources, e.g. loading/unloading, transferring, trans-
porting, storing and processing of
materials.
Fumigating
A term describing a plume from an emission stack which is trapped by a
stable inversion
above the stack mouth, thereby hitting
the ground level very close to the stack.
Functional group
A
group of atoms on which the characteristic properties of a particular
homologous series depends, e.g. the alkanes, alcohols and esters.
Furans
Compounds causing chloracne, liver damage and liver cancer. Strictly C4H4O,
but more commonly one of a range of polychlorinated dibenzofurans that are
produced as contaminants from the incomplete incineration of chlorinated
hydrocarbons.
Gamete
A mature cell, involved in reproduction.
Gas chromatography
A process whereby compounds become separated by being physically carried
by a gas over a liquid of a high molecular weight.
Gas flaring
The burning of recovered landfill gas from a stack under controlled
conditions to help eliminate the discharge of harmful constituents to the
atmosphere.
Gasification
A high temperature process involving the decomposition of organics in the
absence of oxygen. Some of the energy stored as chemical energy from the
organic material will be released as burnable gas.
Genotype
The genes which an organism possesses or the genetic make-up of an
organism.
Groundborne vibrations
Vibrations caused by the reaction of tyres of heavy vehicles with
irregularities in the road surface.
Groundwater
Water under a pressure greater than atmospheric pressure which is present
in the saturated zone of the soil.
Haematins
A group of colored plant pigments, including the red pigment,
haematochrome.
Haloform
A basic organic unit of the halogen group.
Halogen
The reactive members of Group 7 of the Periodic Table, including chlorine,
bromine, fluorine and iodine.
Hardness in water
The sum of the calcium and magnesium ion concentrations. A hard water will
leave a scale on the inside of kettles and will form a scum rather than a
lather with soap.
Hazardous waste
A substance which exhibits ignitability, reactivity, corrosivity, and/or
toxicity.
Heat of adsorption
Adsorption is the process of retaining a gas molecule by either physical
or chemical means onto an adsorbent (a solid, e.g. activated carbon). The
heat change taking place during this process (loss of heat of gas,
increase in temperature of adsorbent) is the heat of adsorption.
Heat of condensation
The quantity of heat required to bring about a phase change from a gas to
a liquid.
Heat of solution
The heat change which takes place when one mole of a substance is
dissolved in excess solvent.
Heavy metal
Inorganic species of large atomic weight. Usually chromium (Cr3+),
lead (Pb2+), mercury (Hg2+ ), zinc (Zn2+),
cadmium (Cd2+) and barium (Ba2+).
Herbivores
Animals which feed on plant material only, e.g. rabbits.
Heterotrophic
A term applied to organisms which need ready-made food materials from
which to produce their own constituents and to obtain all their energy.
High rate aeration
An increased rate of aeration of MLSS in an activated sludge system
requiring less activated sludge and shorter aeration periods.
Homogenous
Consisting of only one phase.
Humus
The vegetative upper layers of the soil.
Hydraulic conductivity
See permeability.
Hydrograph
A graph of stream discharge versus time.
Hydrolysis
The breakdown of high molecular compounds to low molecular compounds.
Hydrophilic
Displaying
an affinity for water.
Hydrophobic
Displaying
an aversion for water.
Hydrothermal vent
An opening in the earth through which heated or superheated water is
ejected.
Hydraulic jump
An area of turbulence and of loss of energy associated with the
transmission from shooting to tranquil flow.
Hydrological cycle
The
endless recirculatory transport process of the earth’s water resources,
linking the atmosphere, the land and the oceans.
Hyetograph
A
graph of water input to a catchment versus time.
Hypha
A tubular filament which is the basic unit structure of most fungi and
some bacteria.
Hypolimnion
The lower layer of water in stratified lakes which retains the winter
temperature.
Ion
Atoms or groups of atoms which have either lost or gained electrons and so
have become either
positively or negatively charged.
Ion exchange
Ion exchange can be illustrated by the following reaction: Ca2+ +
Na2 Z à CaZ + 2Na+.
Incineration
Chemical oxidation at high temperatures where organic material is
converted into heat
energy, flue gas and slag.
Inclusion body
Organic or inorganic bodies containing glycogen, protein or lipids,
present in the
cytoplasm of a bacterium.
Indirect contact condenser
A condenser in which there is no direct contact between the heating medium
and the vapor stream, but a partition divides the two. The water vapor is
removed separately from the heating medium. The drying temperature is 100
– 250 º C.
Invertebrate
Animal without cranium and spinal column.
Irrigation requirement
The difference in volume between effective precipitation and
evapotranspiration.
Isohyet
A line on a map connecting areas of equal precipitation.
lsocyanate
Derivatives of nitrogen-substituted carbamic acids, containing carbon,
oxygen and an
organic amine group.
Isotropic
A substance whose physical properties are the same in all directions.
Jute
Fiber from the bark of some plants, used mostly for sacking.
Karst
Landforms of chemically weathered limestone, characterized by underground
channels and
caverns, swallow holes and open joints.
Ketone
An organic compound containing three carbon atoms, one of which is
double-bonded to an
oxygen atom, the other two each attached
to three hydrogen atoms e.g. acetone.
Landfill
A repository in the ground for unwanted waste.
Landfill gas
This is produced principally from the anaerobic decomposition of
biodegradable organic
waste and includes ammonia, carbon
dioxide, carbon monoxide, hydrogen, hydrogen sulfide,
methane, nitrogen and oxygen.
Landfill liner
Used to limit the movement of leachate and landfill gases from the
landfill site. Can be
made of natural clay material or
composite geomembrane and clay materials.
Lapse rate
The rate of temperature change with height for a parcel of dry air rising
adiabatically.
Latent heat of evaporation
The quantity of heat required to bring about a phase change from a liquid
to
a vapor.
Leachate
Liquid, composed of external rainfall, groundwater, etc. which has
percolated through solid
waste and has extracted both biological
and chemical, dissolved or suspended materials.
Legumes
Legumes are specific plants, e.g. clover, soybeans and lupins, which carry
nodules on their
roots and, together with bacteria of the
genus Rhizobium are responsible for the biological fixation
of nitrogen in the soil.
Life cycle assessment (LCA)
The assessment of the steps in a product life cycle, including: raw
materials acquisition, bulk material
processing, materials production, manufacture, assembly, use,
retirement and disposal.
Ligand
Molecules of a complexing agent in a complex ion, i.e. an aggregate formed
when a metal
ion bonds to several other ions or
molecules which cluster around it. In the reaction
AgC1 + 2NH3à Ag(NH3)2+
+ Cl-, NH3 is the ligand.
Light compensation point
The depth in a sea or lake below which, because of low light intensities,
plants use up more organic matter in
respiration than they make during photosynthesis.
Liquid injection incineration
A method of incineration of liquid waste by high-rate injection into a
combustion chamber.
Lithotrophic
A
term describing organisms which use inorganic compounds as electron donors
in their
energetic processes.
Littoral zone
The
shore of a lake to a depth of about 10 meters.
Lofting
A term describing a plume from an emission stack which remains aloft due
to a stable inversion
below the mouth of the stack.
Lower explosive limit (LEL)
The concentration at which a gas forms an explosive mixture with air.
Lysis
The rupture of cells.
Magnetic
separation A process which
utilizes the magnetic properties of ferrous metals to extract them from
the waste stream.
Masking agent
A substance which will remove an offending odor from an air stream by
decomposition or conversion to an organic salt.
Materials recovery
facility (MRF) Depots where
reusable waste material is recovered.
Mean cell residence time
(MCRT) The average time a single
microbe will remain in an activated sludge system and is calculated by:
Total mass of cells/Rate of cell wastage
Meiosis
A type of cell nuclear division in which the daughter nuclei receive only
half the original number of chromosomes in the parent nucleus.
Membrane process
The removal of dissolved solids from water by passage through a membrane
of minute pore diameter (3*10-10 m).
Mesophilic temperatures
Those temperatures in the range 10 – 45 ºC.
Mesotrophic
A term to describe waters having intermediate levels of the minerals
required by green plants.
Methanogenesis
Intermediate compounds are converted to the final products of methane and
carbon dioxide.
Methanogenic bacteria
Obligate
anaerobes and methanobacteria (e.g. methanosarcina, methanobacilli) which
produce methane gas from the decomposition of acids and alcohols:
CH3COOH à
CH4 + CO2
CO2 + H2O
+ NH3à NH4HCO3
Micro-organisms
Neither plant nor animal, these are small, simple organisms which are
either unicellular or multicellular, consisting of protozoa, algae, fungi,
ricettsiae, viruses and bacteria.
Mineralization
The process by which organic N is reconverted to mineral form by a wide
variety of heterotrophic organisms – bacteria, fungi and actinomycetes.
Mixed liquor suspended
solids (MLSS) The microbial
suspension in the aeration tank containing living and dead micro-organisms
and inert biodegradable matter, the operating concentration of which may
vary in the range 1500 to 4000 mg/1
Mole
A mole of any substance is that amount of it which contains the Avogadro
Constant number of particles. A mole of any substance is equal to its
molecular mass or atomic mass expressed in grams.
Molecular diffusion
The
drifting of molecules under random kinetic motion from a low concentration
region to a high concentration region.
Monomielic
A term to describe a lake having a single period of free circulation or
overturn per year.
Morphology
The study of the form of animals and plants.
Mouse system
Software for the hydrodynamic and hydrochemical design of a wastewater
collection system from the Danish Hydraulic Institute.
Mutagenic
Causing alteration of the genetic material of an organism, leading to
inherited differences.
Mycelium
A mat of branching hyphae found particularly in actinomycetes.
Negative
project A commencing project for
which an Environmental Impact Assessment will not be required.
Negative sorting
Manual sorting of waste to remove the unwanted fractions. Is recommended
only for dry waste.
Neutrality
An ion or ion group which has an equal number of electrons and protons,
i.e. neither a positive nor negative overall change.
Niche
The ecological role of a species in a community.
Nitrification
The conversion of the ammonium ion, NH4+, into the
nitrite ion, NO3+. It occurs in two steps:
(i) 2NH4+ + 3O2
= 2NO2- + 2H2O + 4H+ by
the bacteria genus Nitrosomonas |