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C D E F G H
I J K L M N O P
Q R S T U V W X Y
Z
-A-
ABRASION, FLEX: Fabric wear in a creased area
caused by excessive bending, usually associated with cage contact
used in baghouse filtration.
ABRASION RESISTANCE: Ability of a fiber or fabric
to withstand surface wear.
ABSOLUTE: A degree of filtration that guarantees
100% removal of suspended solids over a specified size found in
the filtrate.
ABSOLUTE PRESSURE: The pressure above an absolute
vacuum. One atmosphere (14.7 psi) greater than gauge pressure.
Symbolized as psia when the pressure is in psi units.
ABSORPTION: The process by which chemicals in
gaseous, liquid or solid phases are incorporated into and included
within another gas, liquid, or solid chemical. For example, sponges
absorb water.
ACCEPTABLE DAILY INTAKE (ADI): The chemical
ingestion level determined by combining the maximum No-Observed-Adverse-Effect-Level
(NOAEL) with the addition of an uncertainty (safety) factor. Chemicals
with ADI levels usually are not considered or suspected to be
carcinogens. This classification results from toxicity data collected
during prolonged ingestion studies conducted on a number of animals.
ACIDITY: The base neutralizing capacity of a
water is known as acidity. Acids contribute to corrosiveness,
influence chemical reactions, and chemical/biological processes.
Acidity is determined using a titrametric or potentiometric method.
ACTIVATED CARBON: Charcoal activated by heating
to 1472-1652°F a material of high adsorptive gases, vapors,
organics etc. Has a large internal surface area. Removes dissolved
color, odor and taste from liquids or gases. Commonly used in
the pharmaceutical industry to remove organic contaminants.
ACTIVATED SLUDGE: Biologically active floc from
aeration and settling sewage and/or organic matter.
ACRE-FOOT is the volume of water (325,851 gallons
of water) required to cover one acre of land with 12 inches of
water.
ADSORPTION: The adhesion of a substance to the
surface of a solid or liquid. Adsorption is often used to extract
pollutants by causing them to be attached to such adsorbents as
activated carbon or silica gel.
AEROBIC BACTERIA: Organisms requiring oxygen
to live.
AEROSOL: A dispersion of small liquid or solid
particles suspended in air, gas or vapor.
ADVECTION: The process by which chemicals and
heat are transported along with the bulk motion of flowing gas
or liquid. For example, nitrates move through soils and aquifer
formations due predominantly to the bulk motion or movement of
water.
AFFLUENT: Fluid entering the filter or filter
system. Commonly described as influent, it is the opposite of
effluent.
AIR FLOW: Measure of the amount of air that
flows through a filter, a variable of the degree of contamination,
differential pressure, total porosity and filter area. Commonly
expressed in either cubic feet/minute/square foot or liters/minute/square
centimeter at a given pressure.
AIR STANDARD: Dry air at 70 degrees F and 29.92"
mercury pressure.
ALKALINITY: The capacity of water to neutralize
acids, a property imparted by the water's content of carbonates,
bicarbonates, hydroxides and occasional borates, silicates and
phosphates caused by groundwater discharges or industrial wastes.
It is expressed in milligrams per liter of equivalent calcium
carbonate.
Most surface waters have alkalinity’s < 200 mg CaCO3/L,
but in limestone areas the alkalinity’s can be greater than
1000 mg CaCO3/L. In some cases, pristine surface water have very
low alkalinity’s and therefore they would be adversely impacted
by acid mine drainage and acid rain. The alkalinity of precipitation
can be from 1 to about 10 mg CaCO3/L. Typically the best alkalinity
for aquatic life is between 100 and 120 mg CaCO3/L. Alkalinity
is determined using a titrametric or potentiometric method.
ALUMINUM (Al): There is no published Maximum
Contaminant Level (MCL), but 0.2 mg/L is considered safe. Elevated
aluminum is believed to be associated with forms of dementia,
such as: Alzheimer’s.
AMBIENT: Refers to common environmental conditions
in which experiments are conducted.
AMMONIA (NH4): There is no MCL established for
ammonia. Ammonia is very toxic to fish and aquatic life. Ammonia
concentrations of 0.06 mg/L can cause gill damage in fish and
0.2 mg/L is lethal to trout. Concentrations in excess of 0.1 mg/L
suggest domestic or agricultural sources of waste.
ANION: A negatively charged chemical. Nitrate
and chloride (Cl-) are examples of anions.
ANION EXCHANGE: The chemical process where negative
ions of one chemical are preferentially replaced by negative ions
of another chemical. In water treatment, the net effect is the
removal of an unwanted ion from a water supply. For example, some
municipalities are installing anion exchange systems to remove
nitrate from their water supplies.
ANAEROBIC: Organism capable of growing without
the presence of oxygen.
ANTIMONY (Sb): The maximum contaminant level
is 0.006 mg/L. Elevated levels of antimony can increase blood
cholesterol and decrease blood glucose.
AQUEOUS: Similar to or resembling water. Referring
to solution made in water.
AQUIFER: The saturated underground formation
that will yield usable amounts of water to a well or spring. The
formation could be sand, gravel, limestone or sandstone. The water
in an aquifer is called groundwater. A saturated formation that
will not yield water in usable quantities is called an aquiclude.
Most Pennsylvania aquifers may be categorized into confined and
unconfined aquifers.
CONFINED AQUIFER (artesian aquifer): The saturated
formation between low permeability layers that restrict movement
of water vertically into or out of the saturated formation. Water
is confined under pressure similar to water in a pipeline. Drilling
a well into this type of aquifer is analogous to puncturing a
pressurized pipeline. In some areas confined aquifers produce
water without pumps (flowing artesian well). When pumping from
confined aquifers, water levels often change rapidly over large
areas. However, water levels will generally recover to normal
when pumping ceases.
Unconfined aquifer (water table aquifer) is the saturated formation
in which the upper surface fluctuates with addition or subtraction
of water. The upper surface of an unconfined aquifer is called
the water table. Water, contained in an unconfined aquifer, is
free to move laterally in response to differences in the water
table elevations.
ARSENIC (As): The MCL for arsenic is 0.05 mg/L.
Arsenic is highly toxic and its prevalence is due to the natural
occurrence of this metal and past use of arsenic in pesticides.
Arsenic poisoning typically makes people feel tired and depressed
and this poisoning is also associated with weight loss, nausea,
hair loss, and marked by white lines across your toenails and
fingernails. For freshwater the concentration should be less than
0.05 mg/L.
ARTIFICIAL RECHARGE: The unnatural addition
of surface waters to groundwater. Recharge could result from reservoirs,
storage basins, leaky canals, direct injection of water into an
aquifer, or by spreading water over a large land surface.
ASYMMETRIC MEMBRANE: A membrane in which the
pore size and structure are not the same from one side of the
membrane to the other. These membranes are usually considered
directional because of difference in flow characteristics depending
on which side of the membrane faces the feed stream.
ASSAY: Analytical procedure to determine purity
or concentration of a specific substance in a mixture.
AUGMENTATION: In fabric air filtration, the
imposition of an electrical field to the collecting surface and/or
subjecting the incoming particulate matter to a charging process.
AUTOCLAVE: A chamber for sterilizing with saturated
stream filters or equipment by using constant high temperature
and pressure.
-B-
BACKPRESSURE: A backward surge of pressure from
downstream to upstream of the filter. Can be the result of closing
a valve or air entrapped in a liquid system.
BACKWASH: Reversal of a fluid flow through the
filtration media to remove solids from the filter. To clean or
regenerate a filter.
BACTERIA: Free living simple celled, microscopic
organisms having a cell wall, lacking a defined nucleus, shape
and round, rod-like, spiral or filamentous.
BACTERIAL CHALLENGE: Testing the bacterial retention
of a filter.
BAGHOUSE: An air filtration structure utilizing
fabric filter bags for the purpose of removing solid particulate
from the gas stream.
BAG LIFE: Time a bag filter performs effectively.
BAR: Unit of Pressure. 1bar = 14.5 psi.
BARIUM (Ba): The MCL is 2 mg/L. Barium can increase
blood pressure.
BASEFLOW: That part of streamflow derived from
groundwater flowing into a stream.
BASKET: Element of a basket strainer. Normally
uses a screen as a medium for removal of course bulk solids.
BELT FILTER PRESS: Akin to a rotary drum and
belt filter is an automatic pressure filter, where sludge is compressed
on an endless rotating belt, dewatering and providing for very
dry cake for discharge.
BERYLLIUM (Be): The MCL is 0.004 mg/L and it
can cause intestinal lesions.
BETA RATIO: Measurement of filter retention
efficiency. Ratio of particles exposed to a filter, as a feed
stream to the particles down stream (filtrate).
BIAXIALLY STRETCHED MEMBRANE: A microporous
membrane from either polypropylene or PTFE that has been stretched
in both the MD and CD direction in a manner to form pores of a
contrilled size and possessing a narrow pore size distribution.
BIOBURDEN: The load or level of microorganisms
in a substance to be filtered.
BIOHAZARD: Biological refuse, possibly pathogenic
in nature.
BIOLOGICAL OXYGEN DEMAND (BOD): BOD is typically
reported as 5 day BOD and ultimate BOD at 20 C and reported as
milligrams of oxygen consumed per liter (mg O/L). BOD 5 is used
by regulatory agencies for monitoring wastewater treatment facilities
and monitoring surface water quality. BOD is the biochemical oxygen
demand of the water and it is related to the concentration of
the bacterial facilitated decomposable organic material in the
water. A sample with a 5 day BOD between 1 and 2 mg O/L indicates
a very clean water, 3.0 to 5.0 mg O/L indicates a moderately clean
water and > 5 mg O/L indicates a nearby pollution source. BOD
is a laboratory test that requires a oxygen sensing meter, incubator,
nitrifying inhibitors, and a source of bacteria.
BIOSAFETY: Biological safety or non-toxicity
of a substance to a living organism. For filters used in health
care applications.
BROWNIAN MOTION: The continuous zigzag motion
of suspended minuscule particles. The motion is caused by impact
of the molecules in the fluid upon the particles.
BLINDING: Blockage by dust, fume or liquid not
being discharged by the cleaning mechanism, resulting in a reduced
gas or liquid flow and increased pressure drop across filter media.
BLOWDOWN: The use of pressure to remove liquids
and/or solids from a vessel.
BREAKTHROUGH: Used to describe the passing of
solids through the cake build up of a filter medium. Also called
breakpoint.
BRIDGING: Material or particulate blockage across
an opening, often of a pore or filter medium.
BUBBLE POINT PRESSURE: A test to determine the
maximum pore size openings of a filter. The differential gas pressure
in which a wetting liquid (e.g. water) is pushed out of the largest
pores and a steady stream of gas bubbles are emitted from a wetted
filter under specific test conditions. A filter integrity test
with specified, validated pressure values for specific pore-size
and type filters.
BURSE PRESSURE: The pressure causting rupture.
The inside-out differential pressure that causes outward pressure
on the structure of a filter medium, filter or housing.
-C-
CADIUM (Cd): The MCL for cadmium is 0.01 mg/L.
Cadmium poisoning is associated with kidney disease and hypertension
and possibly mutations. For freshwater the concentration should
be less than 0.0004 mg/L.
CAKE (FILTER): Solids deposited on the filter
media. In many cases the cake may serve as its own filter medium.
CAKE RELEASE: Ability of a medium to allow clean
separation of the cake from the medium.
CALCIUM (Ca): No specific recommendation, but
high calcium is associated with hardness, total dissolved solids
problems and can cause aesthetic problems.
CALENDERING: A manufacturing process where woven
and/or nonwoven fabrics are pressed between heavy rollers compressing
the fibers. The process reduces the filter medium void volume,
pore size rating, flow-rate and dirt-hold capacity of the medium.
CANDLE FILTER: A reusable filter consisting
of a tube made from ceramics or metal. Flow is from the outside-in
with particulate accumulating on the outside of the candle. The
candle can be cleaned by various means, including back-pulsing,
heat, chemicals etc.
CAPACITY: Volume of product which a housing
will accomodate expressed in gallons or similar units. Also, amount
which will filter at a given efficiency and flow rate, expressed
in gallons per minute (gpm) or similar units.
CAPILLARY FRINGE: A zone of partially saturated
material just above the water table. The depth of the fringe depends
upon the size and distribution of the pore spaces within the geologic
formation.
CAPSULES: Disposable devices which have an integrated
filter and housing, including inlet and outlet.
CARTRIDGE: Filter devise and medium used in
a housing to perform the function of coalescing, filtration or
separation. Also referred to as an element.
CATION: A positively charged chemical. For example,
calcium (Ca+2), and Magnesium (Mg+2) are cations.
CATION EXCHANGE: A process where positively
charged ions of one chemical are preferentially replaced by positive
ions of another chemical. For example, water softeners replace
Ca+2, and Mg+2 ions with the sodium (Na+2) ion.
CAUSTIC: A class or name given to a class or
group of chemicals, usually soda or sodium hydroxide.
CD: Refers to the 'cross machine' manufacturing
direction of filtration roll stock.
Chloride (Cl): It is one of the major anions found in water and
wastewater. The recommended maximum contaminant level is 250 mg/L,
since the chloride ion imparts a salty taste to the water. If
ions of Calcium and Magnesium are present, the chloride ion may
not impart a salty taste until over 1000 mg/L. In addition to
human and animal waste, sources of chloride can include natural
geological formations, road salt storage and applications, oil
/ natural base drilling, and saltwater intrusions. High levels
of chloride can attack and weaken metallic piping and fixtures
and inhibit the growth of vegetation. Chloride ion is detected
using a titrametric or potentiometric method.
Chlorine: Chlorine in one of a number of forms is added to water
to destroy or deactivate disease-causing microorganisms and is
the mostly widely used disinfectant in the United States. Elevated
chlorine levels can great aesthetic problems (strong taste and
odor) and if organic matter is present it can result in the creation
of trihalomethanes, which are potentially carcinogenic with target
organs including the liver and kidney.
Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD): COD is used as a measure of the
oxygen equivalent of the organic matter content of the sample.
Only the organic matter that is susceptible to oxidation by strong
chemical oxidant. COD is typically used when there are industrial
wastewater sources, comparing biological to chemical oxidation
in the selection of treatment process and performances, or depending
on the waste stream it can provide insight into the concentration
of reduced inorganic metal inorganic, such as ferrous iron, sulfide,
and manganese. Chromium (Cr): The MCL is 0.05 mg/L. The impact
of chromium is not clearly defined, but it is known to adversely
impact aquatic organisms.
Conductivity:The theoretical definition of conductivity is the
"reciprocal of the resistance of a cube of a substance 1
cm on a side at a specified temperature". Typically the units
of measure are microhms/cm (uohms/cm) or microsiemens/cm (uS/cm).
Conductivity or specific conductance is a measure of the ability
of a fluid to carry a charge which is directly related to the
concentration of dissolved substances. As the total dissolved
substances in the water increases, the conductivity of the water
also increases. For More information see Total Dissolved Solids.
Cone of depression is a depression in groundwater levels around
a well in response to groundwater withdrawal or pumping water.
Contaminant is any unnatural biological, chemical, physical,
or radiological substance or matter contained in water. Tri-chloroethylene
(TCE) is a synthetic cleaning solvent sometimes found in groundwater
near manufacturing sites.
Copper (Cu): The MCL is 1 mg/L. At 1 mg/L, the water may taste
bitter and is highly toxic and may disrupt the metabolic processes,
especially for children. For freshwater the concentration should
be less than 0.036 mg/L.
D
Deep percolation is the movement of water below the maximum effective
plant root zone.
Denitrifying Bacteria: In the process of nitrification of wastewater,
the two key bacteria of ecological importance are nitrosomonas
and nitrobacteria. These bacteria facilitate "catalyze"
the reactions. Nitrosomonas results in the removal of three pairs
of electrons from ammonia facilitating the formation of nitrite
and nitrobacteria removes to electrons from nitrite to form nitrate.
The bacteria responsible for denitrification are autotrophic and
heterotrophic facultative anaerobes. Monitoring for denitrifying
bacteria is typically done to monitor the performance of denitrification
systems.
Diffusion is a process where heat or chemicals are transported
in response to differences in chemical concentration or temperature.
Movement is from high concentration (or temperature) to low concentration
(or temperature). This process could involve liquids, gases and
solids.
Discharge area is an area where groundwater moves toward or is
delivered to the soil surface. Groundwater can flow into springs,
or seeps; contribute baseflow to streams; or provide supplemental
water for plant use.
Dispersion is the process whereby a chemical, contained in water,
deviates from the path that would be expected due to bulk flow.
In the process the chemical is mixed with surrounding liquids,
causing its concentration to be reduced.
Distillation is a two-stage water treatment method: 1) the liquid
is boiled, producing water vapor; 2) the water vapor is condensed,
leaving most contaminants behind. Distillation can be used to
remove inorganic chemicals, some non-volatile organic chemicals,
and bacteria.
Drawdown is a lowering of the groundwater surface caused by withdrawal
or pumping of water from a well. It is the difference between
the static water level and the pumping water level in a well pumped
at a constant flow rate.
Drainage is the process of transporting surface water over a
land area to a river, lake or ocean (surface drainage), or removal
of water from a soil using buried pipelines that are regularly
spaced and perforated (subsurface drainage).
E
Effluent is the discharge of a contaminant or contaminants with
water from animal production or industrial facilities or waste
water treatment plant.
Erosion is the process or series of processes that removes soils,
crop residues, and organic matter from the land surface in runoff
waters, or by wind. Water droplets begin the erosion process by
detaching soil particles. Runoff waters transport the detached
particles to local and regional streams or lakes. Soil erosion
represents the single largest source of nonpoint pollution in
the United States.
Eutrophication is the process of surface water nutrient enrichment
causing a water body to fill with aquatic plants and algae. The
increase in plant life reduces the oxygen content of the water.
Eutrophic lakes often are undesirable for recreation and may not
support normal fish populations.
Evapotranspiration (ET) is the process of changing soil water
into water vapor through the combination of soil evaporation and
plant water use, or transpiration.
F
Field capacity is the amount of water a soil contains after rapid
drainage has ceased. It is the water content following a period
of gravity drainage without the addition of water.
Fecal coliform is a portion of the coliform bacteria group originating
in the intestinal tract of warm-blooded animals that pass into
the environment as feces. Fecal coliform often is used as an indicator
of the bacteriological safety of a domestic water supply.
The fecal coliform bacterial densities will be determined using
the membrane filtration technique. The MF procedure uses an enriched
lactose medium and an incubation temperature of 44.5 + 0.2oC.
Fecal coliform is bacteria typically found in the feces of warm
blooded mammals. Fecal coliform colonies produced by the M-FC
medium are blue, while non-coliform colonies are pale yellow,
gray, or cream color. Since fecal coliform is found in mammalian
waste, it is recommended that fecal coliform be absent from potable
water.
Fecal Streptococcus:The fecal streptococcus group consists of
a number of species of the genus Streptococcus, such as: S. faecalis,
S. faecium, S. avium, S. bovis, S. equinus, and S. gallinarum.
Fecal Streptococci are typically found in the gastrointestinal
tract of warm blooded animals. Due to the variation in survival
rates the ratio of FC/FS should not be used as a means of differentiating
human and animal sources of bacterial contamination. Fecal streptococcus
colonies produced by the KF-Streptococcus broth are red. For potable
water, the fecal streptococcus should be absent.
G
Gaining stream (effluent stream) is a stream or portion of a stream
where flow increases because of discharge from groundwater.
Grains per gallon is a unit of measurement often used to describe
water hardness. One grain per gallon is approximately equal to
17 ppm of various cations.
Groundwater (sometimes written as two words) is water that occupies
voids, cracks, or other spaces between particles of clay, silt,
sand, gravel or rock within the saturated formation.
Groundwater mining is the removal of groundwater from an aquifer
in excess of the rate of natural or artificial recharge. Continued
groundwater mining reduces the groundwater supply until it is
no longer an economical source of water.
Groundwater recharge is the process where water enters the soil
and eventually reaches the saturated zone. Recharge varies from
place to place due to the amount of rainfall, infiltration, and
surface vegetation.
H
Hardness: The hardness of a water is a measure of the concentration
of the multivalent cations (positively charged particles) in the
water, but primarily it is equivalent to the calcium and magnesium
concentration of the water. Hardness is typically reported as
mg /L as CaCO3 (calcium carbonate), but it may also be reported
as grains per gallon (1 gpg (US) = 17.12 mg CaCO3/L ). Hardness
Classification: Soft: 0 to 17 mg CaCO3/L; Slightly Hard: 17 to
60 mg/L; Moderately Hard 60 to 120 mg/L; Hard 120 to 180 mg/L;
and Very Hard > 180 mg/L. For more information visit the Hardness
Website.
Health advisory level (HAL) is a non-regulatory health-based
chemical concentration in drinking water that results in no adverse
health risks when a given amount of water is ingested over exposure
periods ranging from one day to a lifetime.
Heterotrophic Bacteria: Heterotrophic plate count is a procedure
for estimating the number of live heterotrophic bacteria in the
water. Colonies may form in pairs, colonies, clusters or single
cells, which can be termed as "colony-forming units".
The colonies are relatively small/compact and do not encroach
on each other. This procedure can accommodate volumes of sample
or diluted < 1.0 ml. Test is typically performed in high purity
water, pilot treatment facility performance evaluations, and pilot
scale testing.
Hydraulic conductivity is a term used to describe the ease with
which water moves through soil or a saturated geologic material.
Hydraulic conductivity is influenced by the type of material comprising
the formation (sand, gravel, rock, limestone, sandstone, clay),
the slope of the water table, the type of fluid, and the degree
to which existing pores are interconnected.
Hydraulic gradient is the slope of the water surface in an aquifer.
The hydraulic gradient indicates the direction groundwater will
flow. Water always flows from higher water table elevations to
lower water table elevations. All other factors being equal, flow
is greater when the hydraulic gradient is steeper.
Hydrologic cycle describes the constant movement of water above,
on, and below the earth's surface. Processes such as precipitation,
evaporation, condensation, infiltration and runoff comprise the
cycle. Within the cycle, water changes forms in response to the
Earth's climatic conditions.
I
Infiltration is the downward entry of water into the soil. The
infiltration rate is a function of surface wetness soil texture,
surface residue cover, irrigation application or precipitation
rate, surface topography and other factors.
Iron (Fe):The MCL is 0.3 mg/L. Iron is a secondary drinking water
standard and primarily regulated because of the aesthetic problems
associated with elevated iron concentrations.
J
No Available Definitions
K
No Available Definitions
L
Leaching is the removal of dissolved chemicals from soil by the
movement of a liquid (like water).
Lead (Pb):The MCL is 0.05 mg/L. Symptoms of lead poisoning start
as: abdominal pains, constipation, fatigue, depressed appetite
and decrease endurance, but long-term exposure may led to nerve
and kidney damage and anemia.
Losing stream (influent stream) is a stream or portion of a stream
that discharges water into the groundwater.
Low permeability layers include soil, sediment or other geologic
material that inhibit water movement. These layers may serve as
a base material, or confining beds for an aquifer. This may be
caused by a fragipan or silt clay horizon in the soil.
M
Magnesium (Mg): No specific recommendation, but high calcium is
associated with hardness, total dissolved solids problems and
can cause aesthetic problems.
Manganese (Mn):The MCL is 0.05 mg/L. Manganese is primarily regulated
because of the aesthetic problems associated with elevated levels
of manganese, i.e., a secondary drinking water standard. Elevated
manganese levels can disrupt the nervous system and regeneration
of hemoglobin. For freshwater the concentration should be less
than 1.5 mg/L.
Maximum contaminant levels (MCLs) are legally enforceable drinking
water standards required by the Safe Drinking Water Act. Standards
set by the Environmental Protection Agency establish the maximum
permissible concentration of selected contaminants in public water
supplies. Contaminants are included on the list if they pose a
public health risk. For example, 10 ppm is the MCL for nitrate-nitrogen
(NO³-N).
Maximum contaminant level goals (MCLGs) are public drinking water
standards that serve as nonenforceable goals for selected contaminants
contained in drinking water that pose no health risk to people
over a lifetime of exposure. A MCLG is a suggested level set by
EPA as a guideline for water utilities.
Mecury (Hg): The MCL is 0.002 mg/L for organic mercury. Mercury
has been associated with kidney disease. For freshwater the concentration
should be less than 0.00005 mg/L.
Methemoglobinemia or blue baby syndrome is the condition that
limits the oxygen-carrying capacity of red blood cells. The condition
occurs when bacteria in the digestive tract convert nitrate to
nitrite. Nitrite reacts with hemoglobin in the blood, producing
methemoglobin which cannot carry oxygen. The resulting oxygen
starvation causes a bluish discoloration of the body. The condition
is largely confined to infants less than 9 months old. Excessive
amounts of nitrates may be ingested with water or food. Often
foods, such as fresh vegetables, are a major source of nitrates.
N
Nickel (Ni): MCL has not been established, but for freshwater
the concentration should be less than 0.1 mg/L. Element detected
using flame atomic absorption, no specific standard for nickel.
Nickel may cause dermatitis and nasal irritation.
Non-point source (NPS) pollution is the source of surface or
groundwater pollution originating from diffuse areas without well-defined
sources. The most common examples of NPS are chemicals that enter
surface water during runoff events from crop land and turfgrass,
and soil erosion from cultivated cropland and construction sites.
O
No Available Definitions
P
Part-per-million (ppm) is a measure of concentration of a dissolved
material in terms of a mass ratio (milligrams per kilogram, mg/kg).
One part of a contaminant is present for each million parts of
water. For water analysis, parts per million often is presented
as a mass per unit volume (milligrams per liter, mg/l). There
are one million milligrams of water in one liter.
Perched water tables occur when a low permeability material,
located above the water table, blocks or intercepts the downward
flow of water from the land surface. Water mounds up above the
impermeable material, creating another saturated zone with a water
table.
Permeability is the property of porous materials indicating the
ease with which liquids or gases will be transmitted through a
soil or other porous material. Permeabilities are not affected
by changing the type of liquid.
pH is a numerical measure of the acidity or alkalinity of water.
The pH scale ranges from 1 (acidic) to 14 (alkaline). A pH of
7 is neutral.The technical definition of pH is that it is a measure
of the activity of the hydrogen ion (H+) and is reported as the
reciprocal of the logarithm of the hydrogen ion activity. Therefore,
a water with a pH of 7 has 10-7 moles per liter of hydrogen ions;
whereas, a pH of 6 is 10-6 moles per liter. The pH scale ranges
from 0 to 14. For more information please visit the pH Website.
Phosphate (PO4): There is no MCL for phosphate. In surface waters,
phosphate is typically a limiting plant nutrient. The recommend
maximum concentration in rivers and streams is a concentration
of 0.1 mg/L of total phosphate.
Point-of-entry (POE) treatment is the treatment of all water
entering a house, farmstead or other facility, regardless of its
intended use. Anion exchange is an example of POE treatment to
remove nitrates.
Point-of-use (POU) treatment is treatment of water at the point
it is used. A common example would be water treatment at the kitchen
sink for drinking and cooking uses. Reverse osmosis, distillation
and ozone are examples of POU treatment methods.
Point source (PS) pollution is the source of surface or groundwater
pollution that originates from a well-defined source. Examples
include: industrial effluent; large animal containment facilities;
city waste water treatment discharges; or chemical spills. Point
sources commonly are associated with pipeline discharges of some
type.
Pollutant is any unwanted chemical or change in physical property
that renders a water supply unfit for its intended use.
Porosity is the ratio of the volume of open spaces or voids to
the total volume of a porous material. For example, a sand and
gravel deposit may have 20 percent porosity. Porosity determines
the amount of water that can be stored in a saturated formation.
A saturated formation 100 feet thick with a porosity of 20 percent
could store an equivalent water depth of approximately 20 feet.
Potable water supply is a source of water that can be used for
human consumption.
Precipitation is the process where water vapor condenses in the
atmosphere to form water droplets that fall to the earth as rain,
sleet, snow or hail. Nebraska's long-term annual precipitation
varies from 16 inches in the west to 34 inches in the southeast.
Annual deviations can be greater than 30 percent.
Pumping water level is the water level in a well when the pump
is operating and water is being removed.
Q
No Available Definitions
R
Recharge area is the area where water predominantly flows downward
through the unsaturated formation (zone) to become groundwater.
Reference dose (RfD) is the maximum daily exposure to a chemical
that is judged to be without risk of adverse systemic health effects
over a person's lifetime. It formerly was called the Acceptable
Daily Intake.
Reverse osmosis (RO) is a water treatment method used to remove
dissolved inorganic chemicals and suspended particulate matter
from a water supply. Water, under pressure, is forced through
a semipermeable membrane that removes molecules larger than the
pores of the membrane. Large molecules are flushed into waste
waters. Smaller molecules are removed by an activated carbon filter.
Runoff is precipitation or irrigation water that does not infiltrate
but flows over the land surface toward a surface drain, eventually
making its way to a river, lake or an ocean.
S
Saturated formation (zone) is the portion of a soil profile or
geologic formation where all voids, spaces or cracks are filled
with water. No air is present. There may be multiple water-bearing
formations within a saturated formation. These water-bearing formations
often are separated by layers of clay or other impermeable layers.
Saturated thickness (zone) is the total thickness of a saturated
formation.
Seepage is the movement of water into or through a porous material.
Seepage occurs from canals, ditches, and other water storage facilities.
It sometimes is used to describe water escaping from municipal
landfill sites.
Selenium (Se):The MCL is 0.05 mg/L. Selenium is associated with
hair or fingernail loss, numbness of fingers and toes, and circulatory
problems. For freshwater the concentration should be less than
1.5 mg/L.
Shock chlorination is the addition of chlorine for disinfecting
a water supply system including the well, and all distribution
pipelines. Shock chlorination is recommended when coliform bacteria
are detected, or after system repairs. Treated water, with a concentration
of at least 200 ppm, is pumped throughout the distribution system
and allowed to set for at least 24 hours before flushing with
untreated water.
Silver (Ag):The MCL is 0.10 mg/L. Silver is associated with causing
discoloration of the skin. For freshwater the concentration should
be less than 0.0003 mg/L.
Sodium (Na):No MCL has been set. For individuals on low sodium
diets a general recommendation of 20 mg/L is used.
Specific capacity expresses the productivity of a well. Specific
capacity is obtained by dividing the well discharge rate by the
well drawdown while pumping.
Specific yield is the ratio of the volume of water that will
drain from a unit volume of aquifer by gravity flow.
Spring is the point of natural groundwater discharge to a soil
surface, river, or lake.
Static water level is the water level in a well located in an
unconfined aquifer when the pump is not operating. The static
water level is the surface of the water-bearing formation and
typically is synonymous with the water table.
Strontium (Sr):No MCL has been set, but the element is analyzed
using nitrous oxide -acetylene flame. The primary concern is the
presence of a radioactive form, known as Strontium-90.
Sulfate (SO4):The drinking water limit is 250 mg/L. Sulfate (SO4-2)
is widely distributed in natural waters, but is typically less
than a few mg/L. In Northeastern Pennsylvania, the primary sources
of sulfate in surface waters and groundwater include: acid mine
drainage, acid deposition, and mineral oxidation. Standard set
because of taste and aesthetic problems and sulfates laxative
effects.
Sulfite (SO3):May occur in boilers and boiler feedwaters treated
with sulfite to control dissolved oxygen levels, natural waters
containing industrial waste and in wastewater treatment plant
effluents using sulfur dioxide to dechlorinate the effluent.
T
Thallium (TI): The MCL is 0.002 mg/L, but a MCL Goal is 0.0005.
Thallium is associated with hair loss, changes in the blood, and
kidney, digestive, and liver problems.
Tin (Sn):No MCL has been established for tin.
Total Kjeldahl Nitrogen (TKN): There is no MCl for total kjeldahl
nitrogen. This parameter is used to measure the total amount of
organic nitrogen and is typically used for surface water and groundwater
investigations associated with domestic or agricultural contamination.
Transmissivity is the capacity of an aquifer to transmit water.
It is dependent on the water-transmitting characteristics of the
saturated formation (hydraulic conductivity) and the saturated
thickness. For example, sand and gravel formations typically have
greater hydraulic conductivities than sandstone formations. The
sand and gravel will have a greater transmissivity if both formations
are the same thickness.
Total dissolved solids (TDS) is a water quality parameter defining
the concentration of dissolved organic and inorganic chemicals
in water. After suspended solids are filtered from water and water
is evaporated, dissolved solids are the remaining residue. Dissolved
solids commonly found in Nebraska water are calcium, magnesium,
sodium, potassium, bicarbonate, sulfate, chloride and silica.
Total dissolved solid concentrations depend on the geologic material
water passes through in the saturated and unsaturated zone, and
the quality of the infiltrating water. Total dissolved solid contents
range from less that 100 ppm in the Small streams to greater than
1,000 ppm near the Susquehanna River in northeast Pennsylvania.
Turbidity: Turdidity is a measure of the cloudiness or opaqueness
of the water and is measured in nephelometric turbidity units
(ntu). The turbidity is influenced by the amount and nature of
suspended organic and inorganic material in water. Typically,
the higher the concentration of the suspended material the greater
the turbidity. The value of 1 ntu is recommend for drinking water,
since higher turbidities could cause aesthetic problems or inhibit
the ability of a system to disinfect the water. The source of
turbidity could be fine sand, silt, and clay (i.e., soil separates);
organic material, particles of iron and manganese or other metal
oxides, rust from corroding piping, or carbonate precipitates.
Turbidity measurements are typically not made on surfacewater
sources - see Total suspended solids.
Total Solids: The total amount of solids in the sample, which
includes: dissolved, suspended, and volatile.
Total Suspended Solids: A fixed volume of sample is filtered
through a preweighed and washed glass fiber filter. The filter
is then rinsed and dried at 103 to 105 C. The change in the weight
of the filter represents the weight of suspended material. This
test is typically done for surfacewater supplies and wastewater
treatment plants. For drinking water, turbidity is parameter that
is typically monitored.
Total Dissolved Solids: Is determined by filtering a measured
volume of sample through a standard glass fiber filter. The filtrate
(i.e., filtered liquid) is then evaporated to dryness at a constant
temperature of 180 C. High total dissolved solids may effect the
aesthetic quality of the water, interfere with washing clothes
and corroding plumbing fixtures. For aesthetic reasons, a limit
of 500 mg dissolved solids/L is typically recommended for potable
water supplies.
Total Volatile Solids: The residue for previous testing is then
ignited at a temperature of 500 C. The change in the weight represents
the amount of suspended or dissolved solids that are organic in
nature or volatilized. The parameter is typically used in wastewater
treatment plants because it provides an estimate of the organic
matter content within the waste stream.
U
Unsaturated formation (vadose zone) is the soil or other geologic
material usually located between the land surface and a saturated
formation where the voids, spaces or cracks are filled with a
combination of air and water.
V
Vanadium (V):Currently there is no specific MCL for vanadium.
Vanadium may cause respiratory problems and inhibition of Na and
K in ATP production.
W
Watersheds are regional basins drained by or contributing water
to a particular point, stream, river, lake or ocean. Watersheds
range in size from a few acres to large areas of the country.
Water table is the upper level of a saturated formation where
the water is at atmospheric pressure. The water table is the upper
surface of an unconfined aquifer.
X
No Available Definitions
Y
Yeast and Molds: Yeast and molds are fungi. A fungus is a colorless
(i.e., lacking chlorophyll) plant with practically no differentiation
of cell structure. Yeast are small single-celled forms that reproduce
by budding or spore formation. Molds produce spores for both asexual
and sexual reproduction. Yeast and mold analysis is typically
done on air-borne samples and surface wipes.
Z
Zinc (Zn): The MCL is 5 mg/L, because of problems with the aesthetic
quality due to the taste of zinc.
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