Equivalent (Environmental Engineering) The mass of the compound which will produce one mole of available reacting substance. Thus, for an acid, this would be the mass of acid which will produce one mole of H+, for a base, one mole of OH-.
Ethers (Environmental Engineering) An organic compound which has two hydrocarbon groups bound by an interior oxygen atom. The general formula is R'-O-R".
Eucaryotic organisms (Environmental Engineering) Organisms which possess a nuclear membrane. This includes all known organisms except viruses and bacteria.
Facultative (Environmental Engineering) A group of microorganisms which prefer or preferentially use molecular oxygen when available, but are capable of suing other pathways for energy and synthesis if molecular oxygen is not available.
Fermentation (Environmental Engineering) Energy production without the benefit of oxygen as a terminal electron acceptor, i.e. oxidation in which the net effect is one organic compound oxidizing another. See respiration.
Fixed solids (Environmental Engineering) (FS) are the solids that do not volatilize at 550°C.
Fixed suspended solids (Environmental Engineering) (FSS) is the matter remaining from the suspended solids analysis which will not burn at 550°C. It represents the non-filterable inorganic residue in a sample.
Flocculant settling (Environmental Engineering) Settling in which particle concentrations are sufficiently high that particle agglomeration occurs. This results in a reduction in the number of particles and an increase in average particle mass. As agglomeration occurs higher settling velocities result.
Fluidization (Environmental Engineering) The suspension of particles by sufficient upward velocity of the fluid. During fluidization the gravity force is overcome by a combination of buoyancy and fluid friction.
Gas stripping (Environmental Engineering) Gas transfer of an undesirable gas from a water stream to the atmosphere.
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