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Glossary: F
Fabric Filter:
A cloth device that catches dust particles from industrial emissions.
Facilities Plans:
Plans and studies related to the construction of treatment works necessary to
comply with the Clean Water Act or RCRA. A facilities plan investigates needs
and provides information on the cost-effectiveness of alternatives, a
recommended plan, an environmental assessment of the recommendations, and
descriptions of the treatment works, costs, and a completion schedule.
Facility Emergency Coordinator:
Representative of a facility covered by environmental law (e.g., a chemical
plant) who participates in the emergency reporting process with the Local
Emergency Planning Committee (LEPC).
Facultative Bacteria:
Bacteria that can live under aerobic or anaerobic conditions.
Feasibility Study:
1. Analysis of the practicability of a proposal; e.g., a description and
analysis of potential cleanup alternatives for a site such as one on the
National Priorities List. The feasibility study usually recommends selection of
a cost-effective alternative. It usually starts as soon as the remedial
investigation is underway; together, they are commonly referred to as the
"RI/FS". 2. A small-scale investigation of a problem to ascertain whether a
proposed research approach is likely to provide useful data.
Fecal Coliform Bacteria:
Bacteria found in the intestinal tracts of mammals. Their presence in water or
sludge is an indicator of pollution and possible contamination by pathogens.
Federal Implementation Plan:
Under current law, a federally implemented plan to achieve attainment of air
quality standards, used when a state is unable to develop an adequate plan.
Feedlot:
A confined area for the controlled feeding of animals. Tends to concentrate
large amounts of animal waste that cannot be absorbed by the soil and, hence,
may be carried to nearby streams or lakes by rainfall runoff.
Fen:
A type of wetland that accumulates peat deposits. Fens are less acidic than
bogs, deriving most of their water from groundwater rich in calcium and
magnesium. (See: wetlands.)
Ferrous Metals:
Magnetic metals derived from iron or steel; products made from ferrous metals
include appliances, furniture, containers, and packaging like steel drums and
barrels. Recycled products include processing tin/steel cans, strapping, and
metals from appliances into new products.
FIFRA Pesticide Ingredient:
An ingredient of a pesticide that must be registered with USEPA under the
Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act. Products making pesticide
claims must register under FIFRA and may be subject to labeling and use
requirements.
Fill:
Man-made deposits of natural soils or rock products and waste materials.
Filling:
Depositing dirt, mud or other materials into aquatic areas to create more dry
land, usually for agricultural or commercial development purposes, often with
ruinous ecological consequences.
Filter Strip:
Strip or area of vegetation used for removing sediment, organic matter, and
other pollutants from runoff and wastewater.
Filtration:
A treatment process, under the control of qualified operators, for removing
solid (particulate) matter from water by means of porous media such as sand or a
man-made filter; often used to remove particles that contain pathogens.
Financial Assurance for Closure:
Documentation or proof that an owner or operator of a facility such as a
landfill or other waste repository is capable of paying the projected costs of
closing the facility and monitoring it afterwards as provided in RCRA
regulations.
Finished Water:
Water is "finished" when it has passed through all the processes in a water
treatment plant and is ready to be delivered to consumers.
First Draw:
The water that comes out when a tap is first opened, likely to have the highest
level of lead contamination from plumbing materials.
Fix a Sample:
A sample is "fixed" in the field by adding chemicals that prevent water quality
indicators of interest in the sample from changing before laboratory
measurements are made.
Fixed-Location Monitoring:
Sampling of an environmental or ambient medium for pollutant concentration at
one location continuously or repeatedly.
Flammable:
Any material that ignites easily and will burn rapidly.
Flare:
A control device that burns hazardous materials to prevent their release into
the environment; may operate continuously or intermittently, usually on top of a
stack.
Flash Point:
The lowest temperature at which evaporation of a substance produces sufficient
vapor to form an ignitable mixture with air.
Floc:
A clump of solids formed in sewage by biological or chemical action.
Flocculation:
Process by which clumps of solids in water or sewage aggregate through
biological or chemical action so they can be separated from water or sewage.
Floodplain:
The flat or nearly flat land along a river or stream or in a tidal area that is
covered by water during a flood.
Floor Sweep:
Capture of heavier-than-air gases that collect at floor level.
Flow Rate:
The rate, expressed in gallons -or liters-per-hour, at which a fluid escapes
from a hole or fissure in a tank. Such measurements are also made of liquid
waste, effluent, and surface water movement.
Flowable:
Pesticide and other formulations in which the active ingredients are finely
ground insoluble solids suspended in a liquid. They are mixed with water for
application.
Flowmeter:
A gauge indicating the velocity of wastewater moving through a treatment plant
or of any liquid moving through various industrial processes.
Flue Gas:
The air coming out of a chimney after combustion in the burner it is venting. It
can include nitrogen oxides, carbon oxides, water vapor, sulfur oxides,
particles and many chemical pollutants.
Flue Gas Desulfurization:
A technology that employs a sorbent, usually lime or limestone, to remove sulfur
dioxide from the gases produced by burning fossil fuels. Flue gas
desulfurization is current state-of-the art technology for major SO2 emitters,
like power plants.
Fluidized:
A mass of solid particles that is made to flow like a liquid by injection of
water or gas is said to have been fluidized. In water treatment, a bed of filter
media is fluidized by backwashing water through the filter.
Fluidized Bed Incinerator:
An incinerator that uses a bed of hot sand or other granular material to
transfer heat directly to waste. Used mainly for destroying municipal sludge.
Flume:
A natural or man-made channel that diverts water.
Fluoridation:
The addition of a chemical to increase the concentration of fluoride ions in
drinking water to reduce the incidence of tooth decay.
Fluorides:
Gaseous, solid, or dissolved compounds containing fluorine that result from
industrial processes. Excessive amounts in food can lead to fluorosis.
Fluorocarbons (FCs):
Any of a number of organic compounds analogous to hydrocarbons in which one or
more hydrogen atoms are replaced by fluorine. Once used in the United States as
a propellant for domestic aerosols, they are now found mainly in coolants and
some industrial processes. FCs containing chlorine are called
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). They are believed to be modifying the ozone layer in
the stratosphere, thereby allowing more harmful solar radiation to reach the
Earth's surface.
Flush:
1. To open a cold-water tap to clear out all the water which may have been
sitting for a long time in the pipes. In new homes, to flush a system means to
send large volumes of water gushing through the unused pipes to remove loose
particles of solder and flux. 2. To force large amounts of water through a
system to clean out piping or tubing, and storage or process tanks.
Flux:
1. A flowing or flow. 2. A substance used to help metals fuse together.
Fly Ash:
Non-combustible residual particles expelled by flue gas.
Fogging:
Applying a pesticide by rapidly heating the liquid chemical so that it forms
very fine droplets that resemble smoke or fog. Used to destroy mosquitoes, black
flies, and similar pests.
Food Chain:
A sequence of organisms, each of which uses the next, lower member of the
sequence as a food source.
Food Web:
The feeding relationships by which energy and nutrients are transferred from one
species to another.
Formaldehyde:
A colorless, pungent, and irritating gas, CH20, used chiefly as a disinfectant
and preservative and in synthesizing other compounds like resins.
Formulation:
The substances comprising all active and inert ingredients in a pesticide.
Fossil Fuel:
Fuel derived from ancient organic remains; e.g. peat, coal, crude oil, and
natural gas.
Fracture:
A break in a rock formation due to structural stresses; e.g. faults, shears,
joints, and planes of fracture cleavage.
Free Product:
A petroleum hydrocarbon in the liquid free or non aqueous phase. (See:
non-aqueous phase liquid.)
Freeboard:
1. Vertical distance from the normal water surface to the top of a confining
wall. 2. Vertical distance from the sand surface to the underside of a trough in
a sand filter.
Fresh Water:
Water that generally contains less than 1,000 milligrams-per-liter of dissolved
solids.
Friable:
Capable of being crumbled, pulverized, or reduced to powder by hand pressure.
Friable Asbestos:
Any material containing more than one-percent asbestos, and that can be crumbled
or reduced to powder by hand pressure. (May include previously non-friable
material which becomes broken or damaged by mechanical force.)
Fuel Economy Standard:
The Corporate Average Fuel Economy Standard (CAFE) effective in 1978. It
enhanced the national fuel conservation effort imposing a miles-per-gallon floor
for motor vehicles.
Fuel Efficiency:
The proportion of energy released by fuel combustion that is converted into
useful energy.
Fuel Switching:
1. A pre-combustion process whereby a low-sulfur coal is used in place of a
higher sulfur coal in a power plant to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions. 2.
Illegally using leaded gasoline in a motor vehicle designed to use only
unleaded.
Fugitive Emissions:
Emissions not caught by a capture system.
Fume:
Tiny particles trapped in vapor in a gas stream.
Fumigant:
A pesticide vaporized to kill pests. Used in buildings and greenhouses.
Functional Equivalent:
Term used to describe USEPA's decision-making process and its relationship to
the environmental review conducted under the National Environmental Policy Act (NUSEPA).
A review is considered functionally equivalent when it addresses the substantive
components of a NUSEPA review.
Fungicide:
Pesticides which are used to control, deter, or destroy fungi.
Fungistat:
A chemical that keeps fungi from growing.
Fungus (Fungi):
Molds, mildews, yeasts, mushrooms, and puffballs, a group of organisms lacking
in chlorophyll (i.e. are not photosynthetic) and which are usually non-mobile,
filamentous, and multicellular. Some grow in soil, others attach themselves to
decaying trees and other plants whence they obtain nutrients. Some are
pathogens, others stabilize sewage and digest composted waste.
Future Liability:
Refers to potentially responsible parties' obligations to pay for additional
response activities beyond those specified in the Record of Decision or Consent
Decree.
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