Primary standards (Environmental Engineering) Required drinking water quality standards related directly to human health. These standards are required and enforceable by the U.S. EPA. See secondary standards.
Producers (Environmental Engineering) Autotrophic organisms which produce protoplasm using inorganic carbon and energy from the sun.
Publicly owned treatment works (POTW) (Environmental Engineering) A municipal or domestic wastewater treatment facility.
Reactive waste (Environmental Engineering) A waste which; 1) reacts violently with water, 2) forms potentially explosive mixtures with water, 3) is normally unstable, 4) contains cyanide or sulfide in sufficient quantity to evolve toxic fumes at high or low pH, 5) is capable of exploding if heated under pressure, or 6) is an explosive compound listed in Department of Transportation (DoT) regulations. One of EPA's four hazardous waste properties.
Reaeration (Environmental Engineering) The dissolving of molecular oxygen from the atmosphere into the water.
Recycling (Environmental Engineering) The recovery and reuse of a product which would otherwise be thrown away.
Refuse derived fuel (RDF) (Environmental Engineering) A fuel derived from the combustible portion of municipal solid waste. The fuel is often processed into small briquettes, similar in size to charcoal.
Respiration (Environmental Engineering) Energy production in which oxygen is the terminal electron acceptor, i.e. oxidation to produce energy where oxygen is the oxidizing agent. See fermentation.
Reversible reaction (Environmental Engineering) A reaction in which the reactant(s) proceed to product(s), but the products react at an appreciable rate to reform reactant(s).
Runoff (Environmental Engineering) The water that flows overland to lakes or streams during and shortly after a precipitation event.
Browse Dictionary
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z