| Disease | (Environmental Engineering) Any impairment of the normal function of an organism. |
| Disinfection | (Environmental Engineering) The destruction or inactivation of pathogenic microorganisms. See sterilization. |
| Dump | (Environmental Engineering) An illegal and uncontrolled area where wastes have been placed on or in the ground. See Landfill. |
| Ecology | (Environmental Engineering) The study of living organisms and their environment or habitat. |
| Ecosystem | (Environmental Engineering) An organism or group of organisms and their surroundings. The boundary of an ecosystem may be arbitrarily chosen to suit the area of interest or study. |
| Electronegativity | (Environmental Engineering) The potential of an atom to attract electrons when the atom is bonded in a compound. The scale is 0 to 4 with 0 being the most electropositive (low attraction) and 4 being the most electronegative (high attraction). |
| 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. |