Compression settling (Environmental Engineering) Settling which occurs in the lower reaches of clarifiers where particle concentrations are highest. Particles can settle only by compressing the mass of particles below.
Consumers (Environmental Engineering) Organisms which consume protoplasm produced from photosynthesis or consume organisms from higher levels which indirectly consume protoplasm from photosynthesis.
Conversion (Environmental Engineering) The fraction of a species entering a system which is converted to product.
Corrosive waste (Environmental Engineering) A waste that is outside the pH range of 2 to 12.5 or a waste that corrodes steel at a rate greater than 6.35 mm (0.25 in) per year. One of EPA's four hazardous waste properties.
Covalent bond (Environmental Engineering) A bond in which electrons are shared approximately equally by two atoms.
Cybernetic (Environmental Engineering) Systems which change in response to feedback.
Decomposers (Environmental Engineering) Organisms which utilize energy from wastes or dead organisms. Decomposers complete the cycle by returning nutrients to the soil or water and carbon dioxide to the air or water.
Denitrification (Environmental Engineering) The anoxic biological conversion of nitrate to nitrogen gas. It occurs naturally in surface waters low in oxygen, and it can be engineered in wastewater treatment systems.
Discrete settling (Environmental Engineering) Settling in which individual particles settle independently, neither agglomerating or interfering with the settling of the other particles present. This occurs in waters with a low concentration of particles.
Dissolved oxygen (DO) (Environmental Engineering) The amount of molecular oxygen dissolved in water.
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