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       Solid Waste Management

       GLOSSARY

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  Solid Waste Management
GLOSSARY
         This publication (SW-108ts)
was prepared by the Federal solid waste management program

    U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
              1972

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An environmental protection publication
in the solid waste management series (SW-108 tf).

For sale by the Superintendent of Documents
U.S. Government Printing Office
Washington, D.C. 20402
Price  30 cents
Stock Number 5502-0075

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                               FOREWORD

   Solid  waste management is interdisciplinary.  It incorporates,  for  example, the
specialized efforts of engineers, planners, earth scientists, labor managers, economists,
lawyers,  and psychologists, as  well  as businessmen  in  a variety of service trades and
industries.  Each group  has its  own  specialized and  ever-expanding nomenclature. Not
unexpectedly, therefore, confusion exists regarding certain terms in everyday use. Perhaps
the most common instance is  the way community  officials  and others often refer to
dumps when they mean sanitary landfills and  vice versa. The blurring, of the clearcut
distinction between  the  two terms  has  been a serious problem in communicating to
citizens the need for better solid waste disposal.
   There  is need, then, for a glossary to standardize  the concepts in frequent use. This
publication is also needed  for terms that are coming into use in the literature of solid
waste management and may be  less well known to government officials and members of
the industries involved. This glossary represents an attempt to perform both services.
   Whenever possible, modifying terms are listed beneath the noun modified. The choice
of terms  to be defined and many of  the definitions themselves have benefitted from the
investigations and  reports undertaken under the Solid Waste Disposal Act of 1965, as
amended. In preparing  training manuals, staff  personnel of the Office of Solid Waste
Management Programs concerned with this activity have of necessity developed standard
sets of  terms,  and the  present glossary  has  drawn  from  their work. The  U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency also gratefully acknowledges the contributions  made
by many individuals in  the Federal  solid waste management  program,  other Federal
agencies,  State and local governments,private industry,and universities.. We will welcome
suggestions from users for additional or better definitions that could be included in future
editions of the glossary.

                                          —SAMUEL HALE, JR.
                                              Deputy Assistant Administrator
                                              for Solid  Waste Management
                                      111

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                                         GLOSSARY
ABANDONED MOTOR VEHICLE-A motor vehicle
   that  applicable  State  laws  deem  to  have  been
   abandoned.
ABRASION-Wearing away of surface material, such
   as refractories in an incinerator or parts of solid
   waste handling equipment, by the scouring action
   of moving solids, liquids, or gases.
ACTINOMYCETES • A  large  group  of moldlike
   microorganisms   which   give   off  an   odor
   characteristic of rich earth and are the significant
   organisms  involved in the stabilization of solid
   wastes by composting.
AERATION-The process of exposing a bulk material,
   such as compost, to air,or of charging a liquid with
   a gas or a mixture of gases.
AEROBIC-Able to live and grow only if free oxygen
   is present.
AFTERBURNER-A device used to burn or oxidize
   the  combustible  constituents remaining in the
   effluent gases.
AGGREGATE • Crushed rock  or gravel screened to
   sizes for use in road surfaces, concrete, or bitumi-
   nous mixes.
AIR
   Ambient-The surrounding air.
   Combustion-Air used for burning a fuel.
   Cooling-Ambient air that is added to hot combus-
     tion gases to cool them.
   Excess  Combustion • Air supplied in excess of
     theoretical  air, usually expressed as a percent-
     age of the theoretical air.
   Primary Combustion-Air admitted to a combus-
     tion system at the point where the fuel is first
     oxidized.
   Secondary  Combustion.Air  introduced above or
     beyond  a fuel bed  by a natural, induced, or
     forced  draft. It is  generally  referred to as
     overftre  air if   supplied  above the fuel  bed
     through the side walls or the bridge wall of the
     primary chamber.
   Theoretical-Trie amount of air, calculated from the
     chemical composition of a waste, that is re-
     quired  to  completely  burn the waste.  Also
     referred to as stoichiometric air and theoretical
     combustion air.
AIR  DEFICIENCY-A  lack  of air, in an air-fuel
   mixture,  to supply the quantity of oxygen stoi-
   chiometrically required to completely oxidize the
   fuel.
AIR HEATER-A heat exchanger through which air
   passes and is heated  by  a medium of a higher
   temperature,  such as hot  combustion gases  in
   metal tubes.

AIR JETS-Streams of high-velocity air that issue from
   nozzles  in  an incinerator enclosure  to  provide
   turbulence, combustion air, or a cooling effect.

AIR POLLUTANT-A substance that, when present in
   the atmosphere  in large enough concentrations,
   adversely affects the environment.

AIR POLLUTION-An  impaired condition of the
   atmosphere that results because certain substances
   present in it are too numerous or are of a noxious
   character.
AIR PREHEATER See AIR HEATER.
AIR QUALITY STANDARDS-Levels below which a
   specific substance or  combination of substances
   must be kept in the atmosphere as established by
   legislation.
ALKALINITY-The measurable ability of solutions or
   aqueously suspended  solids to neutralize an acid.
ANAEROBIC-Able to live and grow in the absence of
   free oxygen.
ANALYSIS
   Proximate Analysis • Analysis of  a  solid fuel to
      determine (on  a percentage basis) how much
      moisture, volatile matter, fixed carbon, and ash
      the sample  contains;  usually  the  fuel's  heat
      value is also established.
   Ultimate Analysis-The chemical analysis of a solid,
     liquid, or gaseous fuel. In the case of coal, coke,
      or  solid  waste,  the   amounts  of carbon,
     hydrogen, sulfur, nitrogen, oxygen, and ash are
      determined.
ANGLE OF REPOSE-The maximum acute angle that
   the  inclined surface  of a  pile of loosely divided
   material can make with the horizontal.
AQUIFER-An underground, water-bearing geologic
   formation.

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ARCH
   Drop • A  form of construction  that  supports  a
      vertical refractory furnace wall and  serves  to
      deflect gases downward.
   Furnace-A nearly horizontal structure that extends
      into a furnace and serves to deflect gases.
   Ignition • A refractory  furnace  arch  or surface
      located over a fuel bed to radiate heat and  to
      accelerate ignition.
ASH'The incombustible  material that remains after a
   fuel or solid waste has been burned.
ASH-FREE BASIS-The  method whereby the weight
   of ash in a fuel sample is subtracted from its total
   weight  and the adjusted weight is used to calculate
   the percent of certain  constituents present. For
   example, the percent  of fixed carbon (F C)  on  an
   ash-free basis is computed as follows:
 	FC (weight) X 100
 Fuel Sample (weight) - Ash (weight)
                                 = % ash-free F C
ASH PIT-A pit or hopper located below a furnace
   where residue is accumulated and from which it is
   removed.
ASH SLUICE-A  trench or channel in which water
   transports residue from an ash pit to a disposal or
   collection point.
AUTOMOBILE SHREDDER See SHREDDER.
AUXILIARY-FUEL FIRING  EQUIPMENT • Equip-
   ment used in an incinerator to supply additional
   heat  by burning an auxiliary fuel so  that  the
   resulting higher temperatures: (1)  dry and ignite
   the waste material; (2) maintain ignition thereof;
   (3) effect  complete combustion of combustible
   solids, vapors, and gases.

BACKFILL-The  material used to refill  a ditch or
   other excavation, or the process of doing so.
BACKHOE TAMPING-A processing step, often used
   in direct-dump transfer  systems, in which a con-
   ventional backhoe  is used  to compact waste
   contained in an open-top transfer trailer.
BACTERIA-Single-cell, microscopic organisms, that
   possess  rigid  cell walls. They may  be  aerobic,
   anaerobic, or facultative; they can cause disease;
   and  some are  important in the stabilization of
   solid wastes.
BAFFLE • A  construction intended  to  change  the
   direction of fluid flow.
   Water Cooled-A baffle composed essentially of
     closely spaced boiler tubes.
BAFFLE CHAMBER-A chamber following the com-
   bustion  chamber, in which baffles change the
   direction of and/or reduce the velocity  of the
   combustion gases in order to promote the settling
   of fly ash or coarse particulate matter.
BAGASSE-The fibrous  residue that remains after
   juice is extracted from sugar cane or sugar beets.
BALER*A  machine  used to compress and bind solid
   waste or other materials.
BEARING  CAPACITY'The maximum load  that a
   material can support before failing.
BECCAR1  PROCESS-A composting process devel-
   oped by Dr. Giovanni Beccari in 1922. Anaerobic
   fermentation is followed  by a final stage in which
   decomposition  proceeds  under partially  aerobic
   conditions;  the  process  was later  modified  by
   Verdier and Bordas.
BEDDING, ANIMAL-Material, usually organic, that is
   placed on the floor of livestock quarters for animal
   comfort and to absorb excreta.
BIODEGRADABLE-The significant breaking down
   by microorganisms of the physical and/or chemical
   structure of a compound.

BLADE
   Earth-A heavy, broad plate that is  connected to
      the front of a tractor and is used to push and
      spread soil or other material.
   Landfill-A U-blade with  an extension on top that
      increases the volume of solid wastes that can be
      pushed and spread, and protects the operator
      from any debris thrown out of the solid waste.
   U-Blade-A dozer  blade with an extension on each
      side;  they protrude forward at an obtuse angle
      to  the blade  and enable it to handle a larger
      volume of solid waste than a regular blade.

BLAST GATE-A sliding metal damper  in a duct,
   usually used to regulate the flow of forced air.
                                 V"
BLOWER • A fan used  to  force  air or  gas under
   pressure.

BOOM-Any heavy beam that is hinged at one end and
   carries a weight-lifting device at the other.

BOOSTER  CYCLE-The period during which addi-
   tional hydraulic pressure  is exerted to push  the last
   charge of solid waste into a transfer trailer or a
   container attached to a stationary compactor.

BREECHING-A  passage that  conducts  the products
   of combustion to a stack  or chimney.

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BREECHING  BYPASS • An arrangement  whereby
   breechings and dampers  permit  the  intermittent
   use of two or more passages to direct or divert the
   flow of the products of combustion.
BRICK (FIREBRICK)-Refractory brick made from
   fireclay.
   Alumina-Diaspore Fireclay-Brick consisting mainly
     of  diaspore or  nodule clay and having an
     alumina content of 50, 60, or 70 percent (plus
     or minus 2.5 percent).
   High-Duty Fireclay • A fireclay brick that has a
     pyrometric cone  equivalent (PCE) not lower
     than Cone 31-23, or does not deform more
     than 1.5 percent at 2,460 F (1,350 C) in the
     standard local test.
   Insulating -A firebrick having a low thermal  con-
     ductivity and  a  bulk  density of  less than 70
     pounds per  cubic  foot;  suitable for lining
     industrial furnaces. Also called insulating block.
   Intermediate-Duty Fireclay-A fireclay brick that
     has a PCE above Cone 29 or does not deform
     more than 3  percent at 2,460 F (1,350 C) in
     the standard local test.
   Super-Duty Fireclay-A fireclay  brick that has a
     PCE above Cone  33  on the fired  product,
     shrinks less than 1 percent in the American
     Society for Testing  Materials permanent linear
     change test, Schedule C (2,910 F), and does not
     incur more than 4  percent  loss in  the  panel
     spalling test (preheated to 3,000 F).
BRIQUETTER'A machine that compresses a mate-
   rial, such as metal turnings or coal dust, into small
   pellets.
BRITISH  THERMAL  UNIT (Btu)-The quantity of
   heat required to  increase the temperature of one
   pound of water one degree Fahrenheit.
BUCKET-An open container affixed to  the movable
   arms  of a wheeled or tracked vehicle to spread
   solid  waste and cover  material, and to excavate
   soil.
BULL CLAM-A tracked  vehicle that has a hinged,
   curved bowl on the top of the front of the blade.
BULLDOZER-A tracked  vehicle equipped with an
   earth blade.
BURN (BRICK)-The  degree of heat  treatment to
   which  refractory bricks are subjected when manu-
   factured.
BURNER
   Conical-A hollow, cone-shape combustion cham-
     ber that has an exhaust vent at its point and a
     door  at its base through which waste materials
     are charged; air is delivered to the burning solid
     waste  inside the cone. Also called a teepee
     burner.
   Primary • A  burner  that  dries  out  and  ignites
     materials in the  primary combustion chamber.
   Refuse • A device for either central  or  on-site
     volume reduction of solid  waste by burning; it
     is of simple construction and all the factors of
     combustion cannot be controlled.
   Residential'A device used  to burn the solid wastes
     generated  in an individual dwelling.
   Secondary-A burner installed  in  the  secondary
     combustion chamber of an incinerator to main-
     tain a minimum temperature and  to complete
     the combustion of incompletely burned gases.
     Sometimes referred to as an afterburner.
BURNING  AREA-The  horizontal projection  of a
   grate, a hearth, or both.
BURNING  RATE-The quantity  of solid waste incin-
   erated or the amount of heat released  during
   incineration.   The rate is usually expressed  in
   pounds of solid waste per square foot of burning
   area  per hour or in  Btu's  per square  foot  of
   burning area per hour.
CABLE PULLOUT UNLOADING METHOD-A pro-
   cedure  in which a  landfill  tractor  empties a
   transfer trailer by pulling a cable network from the
   front to the rear of the vehicle.
CAPACITY (INCINERATOR)
   Design-The number of tons of solid waste that a
     designer anticipates his incinerator will be able
     to  process in a  24-hour  period  if specified
     criteria are met.
   Firm • The processing capacity  of an  incinerator
     when its largest  independent unit is not oper-
     ating.
   Rated-The number of tons of solid waste that can
     be processed  at  an incinerator per  24-hour
     period when specified criteria prevail.
CAPILLARY WATER-Underground water that is
   held  above the water table by capillary attraction.
CARBONACEOUS MATTER-Pure carbon or carbon
   compounds present  in the fuel or residue  of a
   combustion process.
CARBON DIOXIDE  (C02)-A colorless, odorless,
   non-poisonous gas that forms carbonic acid when
   dissolved in   water; it  is produced  during  the
   thermal degradation and microbial decomposition
   of solid wastes.

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CARBON  DIOXIDE  RECORDER.An  instrument
   that continuously monitors the volume concentra-
   tion (in percent) of carbon dioxide in a flue gas.
CARBON MONOXIDE (CO)-A colorless, poisonous
   gas that has an exceedingly faint metallic odor and
   taste.  It is produced during the  thermal degrada-
   tion and microbial decomposition of solid wastes
   when the oxygen supply is limited.
CARBON NITROGEN RATIO (C/N)-The ratio of the
   weight of carbon to the weight of nitrogen present
   in  a  compost  or  in  materials  that  are  being
   composted.
CARRY-CLOTH-A large piece  of  canvas or burlap
   used to transfer solid waste from  a residential solid
   waste  storage area to a collection  vehicle.

CATALYTIC COMBUSTION SYSTEM-A process in
   which a substance is introduced into  an exhaust
   gas stream to burn or oxidize vaporized hydrocar-
   bons or odorous contaminants; the substance itself
   remains intact.
CELL-Compacted solid wastes that are enclosed by
   natural  soil   or  cover material  in  a sanitary
   landfill.

CELL HEIGHT-The vertical distance between the top
   and bottom of the compacted solid waste enclosed
   by natural soil  or  cover material  in a  sanitary
   landfill.
CELL  THICKNESS-The  perpendicular distance be-
   tween the cover  materials  placed  over  the last
   working faces of two successive cells in a sanitary
   landfill.
CENTRAL  GARBAGE GRINDER-A conveniently
   located facility that mechanically pulverizes food
   wastes collected from many sources in a communi-
   ty.
CHARGE-The  quantity  of solid waste  introduced
   into a furnace at one time.
CHARGING CHUTE-An overhead passage through
   which waste materials drop into an incinerator.

CHARGING CUTOFF  GATE-A modified charging
   gate used in continuous-feed furnaces that  do not
   have high temperatures near the  charging hopper.
   A sliding steel plate at  the bottom of the charging
   hopper closes on a machined seat at  the top of the
   charging chute.

CHARGING GATE-A horizontal, movable cover that
   closes  the opening on a top-charging furnace.
CHARGING HOPPER-An enlarged opening at the
   top of a charging chute.
CHECKER WORK-A pattern of multiple openings in
   a refractory structure through which the products
   of  combustion  pass  to  accelerate  the turbulent
   mixing of gases.
CHIMNEY See STACK.
CHIPPER-A size-reduction device having sharp blades
   attached to a rotating shaft (mandrel) that shave
   or  chip off pieces of certain objects, such as tree
   branches or brush.
CLAMSHELL  BUCKET-A vessel used to hoist and
   convey materials; it has  two jaws that clamp
   together when  the  vessel  is lifted  by specially
   attached cables.
CLAY • A fine-grain  soil  having  liquid limits and
   plasticity  indexes that plot above the "A" line on
   the Unified  Soil Classification System plasticity
   chart.
CLINKERS-Hard, sintered, or fused pieces of residue
   formed in a  fire  by  the  agglomeration  of ash,
   metals, glass, and ceramics.
COLLECTION-The act of removing solid waste  from
   the central storage point of a primary source.
   Alley-The picking up of solid waste from contain-
      ers placed adjacent to an alley.
   Carryout-Crew collection  of solid waste  from an
      on-premise storage  area using a carrying con-
      tainer, carry-cloth, or a mechanical method.
   Contract-The collection of solid waste carried out
      in accordance  with a  written  agreement  in
      which  the rights and duties of the contractual
      parties are set forth.
   Curb • Collection  of solid waste from  containers
      placed adjacent to a thoroughfare.
   Franchise-Collection made by a private firm that is
      given exclusive right to collect for a fee paid by
      customers  in a  specific territory or from
      specific types of customers.
   Municipal-The collection of solid waste by public
      employees  and equipment under the  supervi-
      sion and direction of a municipal department or
      official.
   Private-The collection of solid waste by individuals
      or companies from residential, commercial, or
      industrial  premises; the arrangements  for the
      service are made directly  between the owner or
      occupier of the premises and the collector.
   Setout/Setback  The  removal  of  full  and  the
      return  of empty containers between  the on-

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      premise storage  point  and  the  curb by  a
      collection crew.

COLLECTION FREQUENCY- The number of times
   collection is provided in a given period of time.

COLLECTION METHOD
   Daily Route-A method in which each collection
      crew is assigned a weekly route that is  divided
      into daily routes.
   Definite  Working Day-A variation of the large-
      route  method in  which definite routes  are laid
      out and a  crew  assigned to  each. Collection
      proceeds along a  route for the length  of time
      adopted for a working  day. The next  day,
      collection begins  where the crew  stopped "the
      day before. This  procedure continues until the
      whole route is covered,  whereupon  the  crew
      returns to the beginning of the route.
   Group Task-A method in which the responsibility
      for  collecting on assigned routes is shared by
      more than one crew. Any crew that finishes a
      particular route works  on another until all are
      completed.
   Inter-Route Relief-A  method in which  regular
      crews  help collect on other routes when  they
      finish their own.
   Large Route-A method  in  which each  crew is
      assigned a weekly route. The crew works each
      day without a fixed stopping point or work
      time,  but  it completes the  route within the
      working week.
   Reservoir Route-A method in which several crews
      are used to pick up on a centrally located route
      after having collected on peripheral routes.
   Single Load-A variation of the daily route method
      in  which  areas  or  routes  are laid  out  that
      normally provide a  full load of solid waste.
      Each crew  usually has at least two such routes
      for a day's  work. The  crew quits  for the day
      when  the assigned number  of routes is com-
      pleted.
   Swing  Crew-A method in which  one or more
      reserve work crews go anywhere help is needed.
   Variable-Size CrewA method in  which a variable
      number of collectors is provided  for individual
      crews, depending on the amount and conditions
      of work on particular routes.

COLLECTION STOP'A stop made by a vehicle and
   crew to collect solid  waste from  one  or more
   service sites.
COLLECTOR (INCINERATOR)
   Bag-Type-A filter in which the filtering medium is
      a fabric cylindrical bag.
   Cyclone-A collector in which an inlet gas stream is
      made to move vertically; its centrifugal forces
      tend to drive suspended particles to the wall of
      the cyclone.
   Dust • Any  device  used  to  remove dust  from
      exhaust gases.
   Fly Ash-Equipment used to remove fly ash from
      combustion gases.
   Mechanical-A device in  which inertial and gravita-
      tional forces separate dry dust from gas.
   Multicyclone • A  dust  collector  consisting  of a
      number of cyclone  collectors that operate in
      parallel; the volume and velocity of combustion
      gas  can be regulated by dampers  to maintain
      efficiency over a given load  range.
COMBUSTION-The  chemical  combining of oxygen
   with a  substance that results in the production of
   heat and usually light.
COMBUSTION CHAMBER
   Primary • The  chamber  in  an incinerator  where
      waste is ignited and burned.
   Secondary-The chamber of an incinerator  where
      combustible solids, vapors, and gases from the
      primary chamber  are  burned and fly  ash is
      settled.
COMBUSTION  GASES-The  mixture of gases and
   vapors produced by combustion.
COMBUSTION RATE See BURNING RATE.

COMPACTION PIT TRANSFER  SYSTEM-A transfer
   system  in  which solid  waste  is compacted in  a
   storage" pit by  a  crawler  tractor  before  being
   pushed  into an open-top transfer trailer.
COMPACTOR
   Mobile-A vehicle with an enclosed body containing
     mechanical devices that convey solid waste into
     the main compartment of the body and  com-
     press it.
   Sanitary Landfill-A vehicle equipped with a blade
     and  with  rubber  tires sheathed  in steel  or
     hollow steel cores; both types of wheels are
     equipped with load concentrations to provide
     compaction and a crushing effect.
   Stationary-A machine that reduces the volume of
     solid waste by forcing it into a container.

COMPOST • Relatively  stable  decomposed organic
   material.

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COMPOSTING • A controlled  process  of degrading
   organic matter by microorganisms.
   Mechanical-A method in which the  compost is
      continuously  and  mechanically  mixed  and
      aerated.
   Ventilated Cell-A composting method in which the
      compost is mixed and aerated by being dropped
      through a vertical series of ventilated cells.
   Windrow-An open-air method in which compost-
      able material is placed in  windrows, piles, or
      ventilated  bins or  pits  and  is occasionally
      turned or mixed. The process may be anaerobic
      or aerobic.
CONTAINER
   Carrying-A receptacle of 35 to 50 gallons capacity,
      usually constructed of plastic  or  aluminum,
      that  is carried  by a collector in  a backyard
      carryout service; frequently called a tote barrel.
   Disposable • Plastic or paper  sacks  designed  for
      storing solid waste.
   Lift and Carry-A large container that can be lifted
      onto  a service  vehicle and  transported to  a
      disposal site for emptying;  also called a detach-
      able container or drop-off box.
   Roll-on/Roll-off -A large container (20  to 40 cubic
      yards) that  can be pulled onto a service vehicle
      mechanically and carried to  a disposal site for
      emptying.
CONTAINER TRAIN-Small trailers, hitched in series
   that  are pulled by  a  motor vehicle; they  are
   utilized to collect and transport solid waste.
CONVERSION See REPROCESSING.
CONVEYOR
   Apron-One  or more  continuous chains that are
      supported and moved by a system of sprockets
      and rollers; they carry overlapping or interlock-
      ing plates that  move  bulk materials on their
      upper surface.
   Drag-A  conveyor that  uses  vertical  steel plates
      fastened  between  two continuous chains  to
      drag material across a smooth surface.
   Flight • A drag conveyor that  has rollers inter-
      spersed in its pull chains to reduce friction.
   Inclined Plate'A separating device that  operates by
      feeding  material onto an  inclined  steel plate
      belt  conveyor  so that  heavy  and  resilient
      materials,  such  as glass, bounce   down  the
      conveyor, and  light and inelastic materials are
      carried upward by the motion of the belt.
   Residue-A conveyor, usually a drag- or flight-type,
      used   to  remove  incinerator residue  from  a
      quench trough to a discharge point.
   ScrewA rotating helical shaft that moves material,
      such as incinerator  siftings, along a trough or
      tube.
COOLING SPRAYS-Water sprays directed into flue
   gases to cool them and, in most cases, to remove
   some fly ash.
CORROSION-The alteration of a material by chemi-
   cal action.
COST PER TON PER MINUTE • A unit that is often
   used in cost comparisons  between transfer  and
   direct-haul operations.
COVER  MATERIAL • Soil  that is  used to  cover
   compacted solid waste in a sanitary landfill.
CRANE
   Bridge-A lifting  unit that  can maneuver horizon-
     tally in two directions.
   Monorail-A  lifting unit, suspended from  a  single
     rail, that can move in one horizontal direction.
CULLET-Clean, color-sorted, crushed glass that is
   used  in  glassmaking  to  speed up the melting of
   silica sand.
CUT-Portion of a land surface or an area from which
   earth or rock has been or will be excavated. The
   distance between an original ground surface and an
   excavated surface.

CUT AND COVER  (CUT AND FILL)-An  infre-
   quently and incorrectly used  term referring to the
   trench method of sanitary landfilling.

CUT-OFF  TRENCH-A trench that is filled  with
   material that is impermeable or very permeable to
   the flow of gas or water. The barrier is used to
   prevent the  movement  of gas or water  or to
   intercept  them  and  to direct  them to  another
   location. See GAS BARRIER.

DAMPER • A  manually or automatically controlled
   valve or plate in a  breeching,  duct, or stack, that is
   used to regulate a draft or the rate of flow of air or
   other gases.
   Barometric • A hinged or pivoted .plate that auto-
      matically regulates the amount of air entering a
      duct, breeching,  flue  connection,  or  stack; it
      thereby  maintains  a  constant  draft  in  the
      incinerator.
   Butterfly-A plate  or  blade installed  in a  duct,
      breeching, flue connection, or stack that rotates
      on an axis to regulate the flow of gases.
   Guillotine-An adjustable plate, utilized to regulate

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      the flow  of gases, installed vertically  in  a
      breeching.
    Sliding'A plate normally installed perpendicularly
      to the flow of gas in a breeching and arranged
      to slide across it to regulate the flow.
 DANO BIOSTABILIZER SYSTEM-An aerobic, ther-
    mophilic composting process in which optimum
    conditions  of moisture, air, and temperature are
    maintained in a single, slowly revolving cylinder
    that retains the compostable solid waste for one to
    five days. The material is later windrowed.
 DEAD ANIMALS'Animals that have died from any
    cause except  those slaughtered or killed for human
    use.
 DECOMPOSTION-The  reduction of the net energy
    level  and  change in  chemical  composition  of
    organic matter, as by  microorganisms.
 DEGLASSERSee OSBORNE SEPARATOR.
 DEMOLITION  WASTE See WASTE, Construction
    and Demolition.
 DENSITY
    Sanitary  Landfill • The  ratio  of  the combined
      weight of  solid waste and the soil cover to the
      combined  volume of the solid waste and the
      soil cover.  (Wsw + WSOii/Vsw + Vso,i)
    Solid Waste-The number obtained by  dividing the
      weight of  solid waste by its volume.
 DESTRUCTIVE DISTILLATION-The airless heating
    of organic  matter that  results in the evolution of
    volatile  substances and produces  a solid  char
    consisting of fixed carbon  and ash. See LANTZ
    PROCESS.

 DIRECT-DUMP TRANSFER  SYSTEM-The unload-
    ing of solid waste directly from a collection vehicle
    into an open-top transfer trailer or container.

DISPERSION-The dilution or removal of a substance
   by diffusion,  turbulence, etc. Technically, a two-
   phase system  involving two substances, the first of
   which is uniformly distributed in a finely divided
   state through  the second (the dispersion medium).
DISPOSAL
   Ocean-The  deposition of waste into an ocean or
     estuarine body of water.
   On-Site-The utilization of methods or processes to
     eliminate or  reduce the  volume or weight of
     solid waste  on the property of the generator.
   Waste-The orderly process of discarding useless or
     unwanted material.
 DOWNPASS-A chamber or gas passage placed  be-
   tween  two  combustion  chambers to carry  the
   products of combustion downward.

DRAFT-The difference between the pressure in  an
   incinerator, or any component part,  and  that in
   the atmosphere;  it causes air or  the products of
   combustion to flow from the incinerator to the
   atmosphere.
   Forced'The positive pressure created by the action
      of a fan or blower, which  supplies the primary
      or secondary combustion  air in an  incinerator.
   Induced • The negative  pressure  created by  the
      action  of  a  fan,  blower, or  ejector located
      between an incinerator and a stack.
   Natural • The  negative pressure  created  by  the
      height of a stack or chimney and the difference
      in temperature  between  flue  gases and  the
      atmosphere.
DRAFT CONTROLLER-An automatic  device that
   maintains a uniform furnace  draft by regulating a
   damper.
DRAGLINE'A revolving shovel  that  carries a bucket
   attached  only by cables and digs by  pulling the
   bucket toward itself.

DRAG  PLATE • A  plate  beneath  a traveling  or
   chain-grate stoker used to support the returning
   grates.

DRUM MILL-A long, inclined steel drum  that rotates
   and grinds solid  wastes  in  its  rough interior;
   smaller ground material  falls through holes near
   the end  of the drum and larger material drops out
   of the  end.  The  drum  mill  is  used  in some
   composting operations.

DULONG'S FORMULA-A formula  for  calculating
   the approximate heating value of a solid fuel based
   on its ultimate analysis.

DUMP'A land site where solid waste is disposed of in
   a  manner that does not protect the environment.

DUMP ING-An indiscriminate method of disposing of
   solid waste. Meaning the unloading or emptying of
   a container: use discharging.

DUMP PLATE -A hinged plate in an  incinerator that
   supports residue and from which residue may  be
   discharged by rotating the plate.

DUST-Fine-grain particulate matter that is capable of
   being suspended in air.

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DUST LOADING-The amount of  dust  in  a  gas;
   usually expressed in grains  per  cubic foot or
   pounds per thousand pounds of gas.

ECOLOGY-The science that deals with the interrela-
   tionships  of organisms and their  living and non-
   living surroundings.
ECOSYSTEM-The interdependence of organisms and
   their surroundings.
EFFLUENT • The substances  that  flow  out  of a
   designated source.

EFFLUENT  SEEPAGE • Diffuse  discharge onto the
   ground of liquids that  have  percolated through
   solid waste  or  another  medium; they contain
   dissolved or suspended materials.
ELECTROSTATIC PRECIPITATOR • A device that
   collects particulates by placing an electrical charge
   on them  and attracting  them onto  a  collecting
   electrode.
ELUTRIATION-Separation of solid waste into heavy
   and light fractions by washing.

EMISSIONS'Material that  is  released into the  air
   either by a discrete source (primary emission) or as
   the result  of a photochemical  reaction or chain of
   reactions (secondary emission).
EMISSION  STANDARD-A  rule  or measurement
   established to regulate or control the amount of a
   given pollutant that  may be  discharged into the
   outdoor atmosphere from its source.
ENGINE  SIDESCREEN-A rugged screen that fits on
   the engine housing of a vehicle used at  a sanitary
   landfill to keep  paper and other objects from
   accumulating and  damaging the engine.

ENVIRONMENT-The conditions, circumstances, and
   influences surrounding and affecting the develop-
   ment of an organism or group of organisms.
ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEM-The interraction of an
   organism  or  group of organisms with its natural
   and manmade surroundings.
EROSION
   Accelerated • Erosion of soil material at a faster
      than natural rate.  Accelerated erosion occurs
     when vegetal cover is destroyed or is affected
      by some activity of man.
   Refractory • The wearing away of refractory sur-
      faces by the washing action of moving liquids,
      such as molten slags or metals, or the action of
      moving gases.
EVASE STACK'An expanding connection on the
   outlet of a  fan  or  in  an air  flow passage; its
   purpose  is to convert kinetic energy into  static
   pressure.
EXPANSION
   Permanent Expansion-The ability of some refrac-
     tories to increase in size permanently at temper-
     atures within their useful range. Also known as
     secondary expansion.
EXPANSION CHAMBER  See  SETTLING  CHAM-
   BER.

EXPANSION JOINT
   Refractory • An  open joint  left open   so  that
     refractories can expand thermally or perma-
     nently. Also, small spaces  or gaps built into a
     refractory structure to  permit sections of ma-
     sonry to  expand  and contract freely and to
     prevent the  distortion  or  buckling of furnace
     structures under excessive expansion  stresses.
     These joints are built in  such  a  way that the
     masonry  can move but that  little or no  air or
     gas can leak through it.
EXTRACTION See RECOVERY.
FACE See WORKING FACE.
FACULTATIVE • Able  to  live  and grow  with or
   without free oxygen.
FAIRFIELD-HARDY DIGESTER (COMPOSTING)
   A patented product of Fairfield Engineering Com-
   pany, Marion, Ohio,  which  decomposes garbage,
   sewage sludge, industrial, and other organic wastes
   by a controlled continuous aerobic-thermophilic
   process.
FAN
   Induced Draft-A fan that exhausts hot gases from
     heat-absorbing equipment, dust  collectors, or
     scrubbers.
   Overfire Air-A fan used to provide air above  a fuel
     bed.
FIELD CAPACITY  (OF  SOLID  WASTE)   The
   amount  of water retained in solid  waste after it
   has been saturated and has  drained freely. Also
   known as moisture-holding capacity.

FILL See SANITARY LANDFILL.
FILTER
   Bag-A device containing one or more fabric bags
     for recovering  particles from  the  dust laden gas
     or air.
   Fabric-A device designed to remove  particles from

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      a  carrier gas by passage of the gas through a
      porous (fabric) medium.
FIRECLAY* A sedimentary clay containing only small
   amounts  of  fluxing  impurities.  It is  high in
   hydrous aluminum  silicates  and  is, therefore,
   capable of withstanding high temperatures.
FIXED  CARBON'The ash-free carbonaceous material
   that  remains  after volatile matter  is driven off
   during the proximate analysis of a dry solid waste
   sample.
FLAREBACK'A burst of flame from a furnace in a
   direction  opposed  to  the normal  gas  flow; it
   usually occurs  when  accumulated  combustible
   gases ignite.
FLUE'Any  passage  designed to carry combustion
   gases and entrained particulates.
FLUE DUST-Solid particles (smaller than  100 mi-
   crons) carried in the products of combustion.

FLUE GAS-Waste gas from a combustion process.

FLUE GAS  SCRUBBER  OR  WASHER-A  type of
   equipment that  removes fly ash and other objec-
   tionable  materials from  flue gas  by the use of
   sprays, wet baffles, or other means that  require
   water as the primary separation mechanism.

FLUIDIZED BED TECHNIQUE-A combustion pro-
   cess  in which  heat is transferred from  finely
   divided particles, such as  sand,  to combustible
   materials in a  combustion chamber. The materials
   are  supported and fluidized  by  a  column  of
   moving air.
FLUXING'Dissolving or melting of a substance by
   chemical action.
FLY ASH-All solids, including  ash, charred paper,
   cinders, dust,  soot, or other partially incinerated
   matter, that are carried in a gas stream
FOMITE'An  inanimate  object that  can harbor  or
   transmit pathogenic organisms.
FOOD PROCESSING WASTE-Waste resulting  from
   operations  that  alter the  form or composition of
   agriculture products for marketing purposes.

FOOD WASTE-Ammal and vegetable waste resulting
   from   the  handling, storage,  sale,  preparation,
   cooking, and  serving of foods; commonly called
   garbage.
FOULING-The impedance to the flow of gas or heat
   that  results when  material accumulates in gas
   passages or  on heat  absorbing surfaces  in  an
   incinerator.
FRONT END LOADER-A collection vehicle with
   arms that engage a detachable container, move it
   up over the cab, empty it into the vehicle's body,
   and return it to the ground.
FUEL BED-The layer of solid fuel or solid waste on a
   furnace grate or hearth.
FUME • Suspended particles in a gas; one micron or
   less in diameter.
FUNGI • Simple plants that  lack  a photosynthetic
   pigment.  The  individual  cells  have  a nucleus
   surrounded  by a  membrane,  and  they may be
   linked together in  long filaments called hyphae,
   which may  grow together to form a visible body.
   Simpler fungi are involved in the stabilization of
   solid waste and sewage.
FURNACE -The  chambers of an incinerator  where
   drying, ignition, and combustion occur.
FURNACE VOLUME-The total internal  volume of
   combustion chambers.
FUSION POINT-The temperature at which a particu-
   lar complex mixture of minerals can flow  under
   the weight of its own mass  Because most refrac-
   tory materials have no definite  fusion  points but
   soften gradually over a range of temperatures, (lie
   conditions of measurement have been standardized
   by the ASTM. See  PYROMETRIC CONE EQUIV-
   ALENT.
GARBAGE Sec FOOD WASTE.
GARCHEY  SYSTEM-A patented system in  which
   residential waste is temporarily stored  in a  water-
   filled flushing device  mounted under a sink; it is
   conveyed  through tubes to a central holding tank.
GAS BARRIER-Any device or material used to divert
   the flow of gases produced in a sanitary landfill or
   by other  land disposal techniques. See CUT-OFF
   TRENCH.
GASIFICATION-The  process  of converting a solid or
   liquid fuel into a gaseous fuel.
GAS  WASHER OR  SCRUBBER  See FLUE  GAS
   SCRUBBER.
GENERATION-The act  or process of producing solid
   waste.
GRADER • A  gas-  or  diesel-powered,  pneumatic-
   wheeled machine  equipped with a centrally lo-
   oted  blade  that can be angled  to cast to  either

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GRADIENT-The degree of slope or a rate of change.
GRAPPLE'A clamshell-type bucket having three  or
   more jaws; also called a star or orange peel bucket.
GRATE-A  device used to  support  the solid fuel  or
   solid waste in a furnace  during drying, ignition, or
   combustion.  Openings in it  permit air  to  pass
   through it.
   Fixed-A grate that has  no moving parts; called a
      stationary  grate. A  stationary grate  through
      which no air passes is called a dead plate.
   Movable-A grate with moving  parts. A movable
     grate  designed to feed solid fuel or solid waste
     to a furnace is called a stoker. See STOKER.
GRAVEL-Rock fragments from 2 mm to 64 mm (.08
   to 2.5 inches) in diameter; gravel mixed with sand,
   cobbles, boulders, and containing no more than  15
   percent of fines.
GRAVITY  WALL-A furnace wall supported directly
   by the foundation or floor of a structure.
GRINDING-The mechanical  pulverization of solid
   waste.
GROUNDWATER-Water  present  in the saturated
   zone of an aquifer.
   Free-Groundwater in aquifers that are not bound-
      ed by or confined in impervious strata.
GROUNDWATER   RUNOFF • That  part  of  the
   groundwater   that  is discharged into a stream
   channel as spring or seepage water.

GROUSER-A ridge or cleat  that  extends across a
   crawler tractor track to improve its traction.
GROUT-A cementing or sealing mixture of cement
   and water to which sand, sawdust, or other fillers
   may be added.
HAMMERMILL • A broad  category of high-speed
   equipment that uses pivoted or fixed hammers or
   cutters to crush, grind, chip, or shred solid wastes.
HARDPAN-A hardened,  compacted,  or cemented
   soil layer.
HAUL DISTANCE
   1. The distance a collection vehicle travels from its
   last pickup stop to the solid waste transfer station,
   processing facility, or sanitary landfill.
   2. The distance a vehicle travels from a solid waste
   transfer station or processing facility to a point of
   final disposal.
   3.  The distance  that  cover material  must  be
   transported from an excavation or stockpile to the
   working face of a sanitary landfill.
HAUL TIME-The elapsed  or cumulative time spent
   transporting  solid  waste between  two  specific
   locations.

HEARTH
   Burning-A solid surface to support the solid fuel or
     solid waste in a furnace during drying, ignition,
     or combustion, without air openings in it. The
     surface upon  which material  is  placed  for
     combustion.
   Cold Drying-A surface upon which unheated waste
     material is placed to  dry or burn; hot combus-
     tion gases  are then passed over the material.
   Drying • A solid surface in  an  incinerator upon
     which  wet waste materials or liquids or waste
     matter that may turn to liquid before burning
     are placed to dry or burn with the help of hot
     combustion gases.
   Hot Drying-A surface upon which waste material is
     placed to  dry or burn;.hot  combustion gases
     first pass  over the wastes  and then under the
     hearth.
HEAT
   Available-The quantity  of useful heat produced
     per unit of fuel if it  is completely burned; the
     heat values of the dry flue-gas and water vapor
     are deducted.
HEAT  BALANCE -An accounting of the distribution
   of the heat  input  and  output  of an incinerator,
   usually on an hourly basis.
HEAT  EXCHANGER-A device that transfers heat
   from one fluid to  another without allowing them
   to mix.
HEAT  OF COMBUSTION-The  heat released, meas-
   ured in Btu's, when a unit quantity of  waste  or
   fuel is burned.
HEAT  RELEASE RATE-The amount of heat libera-
   ted  during  complete combustion; it is  usually
   expressed in  Btu's per hour per cubic foot of the
   internal volume of  the furnace where the combus-
   tion takes place.
HEAT  VALUE
   High-The Btu's liberated when a pound of solid
     waste is burned completely and the products of
     combustion are  cooled to the initial tempera-
     ture of the solid waste, as in a calorimeter.
   Low-The high heat value minus the latent heat of
     vaporization  of the  water that  is formed  by
     burning the hydrogen in the fuel.

HEAVY MEDIA SEPARATION-Separation  of solid
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   wastes into  heavy  and light fractions in a fluid
   medium whose density lies between theirs.
HOG FEEDING-The utilization of heat-treated food
   wastes as a livestock feed.
HOUSEHOLD SOLID WASTE See SOLID WASTE,
   Residential.
HUMUS-Decomposed organic material.
HYDRAULIC SCOOPER-A  self-propelled crawler
   vehicle equipped with hydraulically operated arms
   that lift, empty, and replace containers carried on
   a transfer trailer bed.
HYDRAULIC TIPPER-A device that unloads  a
   transfer trailer by  raising its front end  to  a 70
   degree angle.
HYDROGEN SULFIDE (H2S)-A poisonous gas with
   the odor of rotten eggs that is produced from the
   reduction of sulfates in and the putrefaction of a
   sulfur-containing organic material.
HYDROLOGY'Science dealing with the properties,
   distribution, and flow of water on or in the earth.
IGNITION TEMPERATURE-Lowest temperature of
   a  fuel  at  which  combustion  becomes  self-
   sustaining.
IMPACT MILL-A machine that grinds material by
   throwing it against heavy metal  projections rigidly
   attached to a rapidly rotating shaft.
IMPERVIOUS-Resistant  to penetration  by fluids or
   gases.
INCINERATION-The controlled process by which
   solid,  liquid, or gaseous combustible wastes are
   burned and  changed  into gases and the residue
   produced contains little or no combustible mate-
   rial.
INCINERATOR • An engineered apparatus used  to
   burn waste substances and in which all the factors
   of combustion-temperature, retention time, tur-
   bulence, and combustion air—can be controlled.
   Batch  Fed • An incinerator  that  is  periodically
     charged with solid waste;  one charge is allowed
     to burn down or burn out  before another is
     added.
   Cell-type • An  incinerator whose grate areas  are
     divided into cells, each of which has its own ash
     drop, underfire air control, and ash grate.
   Central-A conveniently located facility that  burns
     solid  waste  collected  from  many different
     sources.
   Chute Fed-An incinerator that is charged through
      a chute that extends two or more floors above
      it.
   Continuous Feed-An incinerator into which solid
      waste is charged almost continuously to main-
      tain a steady rate of burning.
   Controlled-Air-An incinerator with two or more
      combustion areas  in which the amounts  and
      distribution of air are controlled. Partial com-
      bustion takes place in the first zone, and gases
      are burned in a subsequent zone or zones.
   Direct Fed-An incinerator that accepts solid waste
      directly into its combustion chamber.
   Flue Fed-An incinerator that is charged through a
      shaft  that functions as a  chute  for charging
      waste and  has a flue to carry  the products of
      combustion.
   Industrial • An incinerator  designed to  burn  a
      particular industrial waste.
   Multiple Chamber-An incinerator consisting of two
      or more chambers, arranged as in-line or retort
      types,  interconnected by gas passage ports or
      ducts.
   Municipal • A  privately  or publicly owned incin-
      erator   primarily  designed  and used to burn
      residential and commercial solid wastes.
   On-Site -An incinerator  that burns solid waste on
      the property utilized by the generator thereof.
   Open Pit-A burning device that has an open top
      and  a  system of closely  spaced  nozzles that
      place  a  stream of high-velocity  air over  the
      burning zone.
   Retort-type • A  multiple-chamber  incinerator  in
      which  the gases  travel  from  the end  of the
      ignition chamber, then pass  through the  mixing
      and combustion chamber.
INCINERATOR GAS See FLUE GAS.

INDORE  PROCESS • An  anaerobic  composting
   method that originated  in India; it is similar to the
   Bangalore   process  and was modified by Van
   Maanen.  Organic wastes  are  placed in alternate
   layers with human or animal excreta in a pit or
   pile. The piles are turned twice in six months and
   drainage is used to keep the compost moist.

INFILTRATION-The process whereby some precipi-
   tation flows through the surface of the ground.

INFILTRATION AIR-Air  that leaks  into  the  cham-
   bers or ducts of an incinerator.

INOCULUM • Microorganisms  placed  in  a  culture
   medium, soil, compost, etc.
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INTERFLOW • That portion of  precipitation  that
   infiltrates into the soil and moves laterally under
   its surface until intercepted by a stream channel or
   until it resurfaces down  slope from its point of
   infiltration.
INTERMITTENT  STREAM • A  channel in which
   water sometimes flows
INTERNAL COMPACTION TRANSFER SYSTEM-A
   transfer method in which the reciprocating action
   of a hydraulically  powered bulkhead contained
   within an enclosed trailer packs solid waste against
   the rear doors.
JUNK • Unprocessed materials  suitable for reuse or
   recycling.
K-FACTOR-The thermal conductivity of a material,
   expressed as Btu per sq ft per hour  in  degrees
   Fahrenheit  and  inches.  See   THERMAL CON-
   DUCTIVITY.
KNIFE HOG See CHIPPER.
LANTZ PROCESS-A destructive distillation tech-
   nique, in which the combustible components of
   solid waste are  converted into combustible gases,
   charcoal, and a variety of distillates.
LEACHATE-Liquid that has percolated through solid
   waste or other medium and has extracted dissolved
   or suspended materials from it.
LEDGE PLATE-A plate  that  is  adjacent to  or
   overlaps the edge of a stoker.
LIFT-In a sanitary landfill, a compacted layer of solid
   wastes and the top layer of cover material.
LINING-The material used on  the inside of a furnace
   wall; usually of high-grade refractory tiles or bricks
   or a plastic refractory material.
LITTER-Wantonly discarded material.
LOAD-BEARING  RESISTANCE (REFRACTORY)
   The degree  to  which a  refractory resists defor-
   mation when subjected to a specified compressive
   load at a specified temperature and time.

LOAM-A soft, easily worked soil containing sand, silt,
   and clay.
LYSIMETER-A device used to measure the  quantity
   or rate  of water movement  through  or  from a
   block of soil or other material, such as solid waste,
   or used to  collect percolated water for quality
   analysis.
MANURE • Primarily  the excreta of  animals; may
   contain some spilled feed or bedding.
MATERIAL  BALANCE • An  accounting  of  the
   weights of materials entering and  leaving  a pro-
   cessing unit, such as an incinerator, usually on an
   hourly basis.
MEMBRANE BARRIER-Thin layer of material im-
   permeable to the flow of gas or water.
METALS-In the secondary materials industry,  metals
   include all ferrous, nonferrous, and alloy materials.
METHANE (CH4)-An odorless, colorless, and asphyx-
   iating  gas that can explode under certain circum-
   stances; can be  produced by solid waste  under-
   going anaerobic decomposition.
MICRON-A  measure of dust-particle diameter equal
   to  1/1,000 of a millimeter (1/25,400 of an inch).
MICRON EFFICIENCY  CURVE-A curve  showing
   how well a collector traps micron-size particles.
MILLED REFUSE-Solid waste that has been mechan-
   ically reduced in size.
MIXING  CHAMBER-A chamber usually  placed be-
   tween the primary  and  secondary combustion
   chambers of  an  incinerator;  the  products  of
   combustion are  thoroughly mixed there by tur-
   bulence that is created by increased velocities of
   gases,  checker work, or turns in the direction of
   the gas flow.
MOISTURE  CONTENT (SOLID WASTE)-The weight
   loss (expressed in percent) when a sample of solid
   waste  is  dried to a constant weight at a temper-
   ature of 100 C to 105 C.
MOISTURE  HOLDING  CAPACITY See FIELD
   CAPACITY.
MOISTURE  PENETRATION-The depth  to  which
   irrip.i'ion water or rain  penetrates soil before the
   rate of downward movement becomes negligible.
MONOLITHIC CONSTRUCTION See MONOLITHIC
   LINING.
MONOLITHIC LINING-A refractory  lining or con-
   struction  made in large sections on site; conven-
   tional  layers and joints  of brick construction are
   not used.
MORTAR
   Air-Setting Refractory-A finely  ground  material
     that,  when it dries, develops a strong bond
     between refractory materials, even when heated
     to working furnace  temperatures. Also known
     as cold-setting refractory mortar.
   Fireclay-A mortar made  of high-fusion-point fire-
     clay and water; it is often used to fill joints in
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     refractory walls to stop air or gas leaks without
    . forming a strong bond.
   Heat-Setting Refractory-A  mortar  in which  the
     bond  is developed by the application of rela-
     tively high temperatures, which vitrify part of
     its  constituents. Also known  as  hut-setting
     refractory mortar.
   Hydraulic Setting-A mortar  that hardens or sets as
     a result of hydration, a chemical reaction with
     water.  In an  incinerator, the  water in  the
     mortar evaporates and a ceramic bond develops
     when  the  working  furnace  temperature  is
     applied.
MUNGO-The waste of milled wool that is combined
   with other fibers to make low-quality cloth.

ODOR THRESHOLD-The lowest concentration of an
   airborne odor that a human can detect.
OFFAL • Intestines  and discarded  parts, including
   paunch manure, of slaughtered animals.
OPACITY RATING-The apparent obscuration of an
   observer's vision that equals the apparent obscura-
   tion of smoke of a given rating on the Ringelmann
   Chart.
OPEN BURNING-Uncontrolled burning of wastes in
   the open or in an open dump.
OPEN DUMP See DUMP.
ORGANIC  CONTENT • Synonymous  with  volatile
   solids,  except for small  traces of some inorganic
   materials  such  as calcium  carbonate, that lose
   weight at temperatures used in determining vol-
   atile solids.
ORGANISM-Any living thing.
   Microorganism-Any living thing that is microscopic
     or submicroscopic in  size.
ORSAT • An  apparatus used to analyze flue  gases
   volumetrically by measuring the amounts of car-
   bon dioxide, oxygen, and carbon monoxide pres-
   ent.

OSBORNE SEPARATOR-A device  that utilizes a
   pulsed, rising column  of air  to  separate  small
   particles of glass, metal, and other dense  items
   from compost.
OVERFIRE AIR See  AIR, Secondary Combustion.
PACKER See COMPACTOR.
PATHOGEN • An  organism capable   of  producing
   disease.
PEAT'Partially decomposed organic material.
 PEEP DOOR-A small door or hole in an incinerator,
   through which combustion can be observed.
 PERCENT MOISTURE CONTENT (SOLID WASTE)
   The percent of moisture contained in solid waste;
   it can be calculated on a dry or wet basis.
           	100 (water content of sample)	
           Dry weight of sample & water content of sample
l.Wet =
         _ 100 (water content of sample)
              Dry weight of sample
PERCOLATION-A qualitative term that refers to the
   downward movement of water through soil, solid
   waste, or other porous medium.
PERMEABILITY-The  capacity  of a porous medium
   to conduct or transmit fluids.
pH-Negative logarithm of the hydrogen ion concen-
   tration; a measure of acidity and alkalinity.
PICKING TABLE OR  BELT-Table or belt on which
   solid waste is manually sorted and certain items
   are  removed. It is  normally used in composting
   and salvage operations.
PLASTIC INSULATION-An insulation that is plastic
   enough when mixed with water that  it  can adhere
   to outer furnace walls  or  be placed  over furnace
   arches.
PNEUMATIC ASH HANDLING-A  system of pipes
   and cyclone separators that conveys  fly ash  or
   floor dust to a bin via an air stream.
POLLUTION-The condition  caused  by  the presence
   in the environment of substances of such character
   and in such quantities that  the quality of the
   environment is impaired or rendered offensive to
   life.
POLYVINYL CHLORIDE (PVC)-A common plastic
   material  that  releases  hydrochloric acid when
   burned.
POROSITY • Ratio  of the volume  in  any  porous
   material  that is not  filled with solid matter to the
   total volume occupied.
PROCESSING -Any method, system, or other treat-
  ment designed  to change  the  physical form  or
  chemical content of solid waste.
PRODUCTS OF COMBUSTION-The gases,  vapors,
   and solids that result from the combustion of a
   fuel.
PSI-Pressure in pounds of force per square inch.
PULVERIZATION-The crushing or grinding of mate-
   rial into small pieces.
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PUSH PIT • A  storage  system  sometimes  used in
   stationary compactor transfer  systems.  A  hy-
   draulically powered  bulkhead  that traverses the
   length  of the  pit periodically  pushes the stored
   waste into the hopper of a compactor.

PUTREFACTION-The decomposition of organic mat-
   ter by  microorganisms and oxidation,  resulting in
   odors.
PUTRESCIBLE • Organic matter  capable  of  being
   decomposed by microorganisms.
PYROLYSIS-The chemical decomposition of a mate-
   rial by heat in the absence of oxygen.

PYROMETER • An  instrument  for  measuring  or
   recording temperatures.
   Optical A temperature-measuring instrument that
      matches the intensity of radiation at a single
      wavelength  from a tungsten filament with the
      intensity  of the radiation  at  the  same wave-
      length emitted by a heat source.
   Radiation-A device that determines temperature
      by measuring the intensity  of radiation at all
      wavelengths emitted by a material having a high
      temperature.
PYROMETRIC  CONE EQUIVALENT (PCE)-An in-
   dex  to the  refractoriness  of a  material;  it is
   obtained by  a test that provides the number of a
   standard pyrometric cone that is closest in its
   bending behavior to that of  a pyrometric  cone
   made of the material when both  are heated in
   accordance with the ASTM Standard Method of
   Test for Pyrometric Cone Equivalent of Refrac-
   tory Materials.
QUENCH TROUGH-A water-filled trough into which
   burning residue drops from an incinerator furnace.

RASPER-A grinding machine in the form of a large
   vertical drum containing heavy hinged arms that
   rotate horizontally over a rasp-and-sieve floor.

RATED LOAD-The maximum load that a crane is
   designed to handle safely.

RECLAMATION-The restoration  to a better or more
   useful state,  such as land reclamation  by sanitary
   landfilling, or  the  obtaining of useful  materials
   from solid waste.
RECOVERABLE  RESOURCES • Materials  that still
   have useful physical or chemical properties after
   serving a specific purpose and  can, therefore,  be
   reused or recycled for the same or other purposes.
RECOVERY-The process  of obtaining materials or
   energy  resources  from solid  waste. Synonyms:
   Extraction, Reclamation, Salvage.
   Energy Energy available from  the heat generated
     when solid wastes are incinerated.
RECYCLING-The process by  which waste materials
   are  transformed  into  new  products in  such a
   manner that the original products may lose their
   identity.
REFRACTORY-Nonmetallic substances used to line
   furnaces because  they can endure high tempera-
   tures. In addition,  they should normally be able to
   resist one  or  more of  the following destructive
   influences:  abrasion,  pressure, chemical attack,
   and rapid changes in temperature.
   Castable • A hydraulic-setting  refractory,  suitable
     for casting or being pneumatically formed into
     heat-resistant shapes or walls.
   High Alumina -A  refractory  product containing
     47.5 percent more  alumina than regular refrac-
     tories.
   Plastic-A blend of ground fireclay materials in a
     plastic form, that is  suitable for ramming into
     place to form monolithic linings or special
     shapes. It may be air-setting or heat-setting and
     is available in different qualities of heat resis-
     tance.
REFUSE See SOLID WASTE.
REFUSE CHUTE-A  pipe, duct, or trough  through
   which solid waste is conveyed pneumatically or by
   gravity to a central storage area.
REFUSE TRAIN See  CONTAINER TRAIN.
REINJECTION • Reproduction  of  fly ash into a
   furnace to burn out all the combustibles.
RENDERING • A  process  of  recovering fatty  sub-
   stances  from  animal  parts by  heat treatment,
   extraction, and distillation.
REPROCESSING-The action  of changing the  con-
   dition of a secondary material.
RESIDUE-Material that  remains after gases, liquids,
   or solids have been removed.
   Incinerator  Residue  All  of  the - solid material
     collected after an incineration process is com-
     pleted.
 REUSE-The reintroduction of a commodity into the
   economic stream without any change.
 RINGELMANN CHART-Printed or photographically
   reproduced illustrations of four shades  of gray,
   that an observer can use to estimate the density of
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   smoke emitted from an incinerator. A clear stack
   is recorded as 0, and 100 percent black smoke as
   5.  Number  1 has a 20  percent density,  and  2
   through 4 are progressively 20 percent more dense.
 RIPARIAN RIGHTS-Rights of the landowner to
   water on or bordering  his property; they include
   his  right to prevent upstream water from being
   diverted or misused.
 RUBBISH-A general term for solid waste—excluding
   food  waste  and ashes—taken  from  residences,
   commercial establishments, and institutions.
 RUBBLE-Broken pieces of masonry and concrete.
 RUNOFF'That portion of precipitation or irrigation
   water that drains from an area as surface flow.
 SALVAGE-The utilization  of waste materials.
 SALVAGING-The controlled removal of waste mate-
   rials for utilization.
 SAND-A course-grained soil, the greater portion of
   which  passes through a No.  4 sieve, according to
   the  Unified Soil Classification System.
 SANDY LOAM-A soft, easily worked soil containing
   0 to 20 percent clay, 0  to 50 percent silt, and 43
   to 85  percent sand, according to the U.S. Depart-
   ment of Agriculture classification code.
 SANITARY LANDFILL-A site where solid waste is
   disposed using sanitary landfilling techniques.
 SANITARY LANDFILLING-An engineered method
   of disposing of solid waste on land  in a manner
   that protects the environment,  by spreading the
   waste  in thin layers, compacting it to  the smallest
   practical volume, and covering it with soil by the
   end of each working  day.

SANITARY LANDFILLING METHOD
   Area-A method in which the wastes are spread and
     compacted on the surface of the ground and
     cover material is  spread and  compacted over
     therm
   Quarry-A variation of the area method in which
     the   wastes are spread  and  compacted  in a
     depression; cover material is generally obtained
     elsewhere.
   Ramp-Another variation of  the area method in
     which a cover material  is obtained by  excavat-
     ing  in front of the working face. A variation of
     this  method is known as the  progressive slope
     sanitary landfilling method.
   Trench-A method in which the waste is spread and
     compacted in a trench. The excavated spoil is
     spread and compacted over the waste to form
     the basic cell structure.
   Wet Area-A method used in a swampy area where
     precautions are taken to avoid water pollution
     before proceeding with the area landfill tech-
     nique.
SANITATION-The control of all the factors in man's
   physical environment that exercise or can exercise
   a  deleterious effect on his physical development,
   health, and survival.
SATELLITE VEHICLE-A  small  collection vehicle
   that  transfers  its  loads into  a larger  vehicle
   operating in conjunction with it.
SILT • A fine-grain soil having liquid  limits  and
   plasticity indexes that plot below the  "A" line on
   the  Unified  Soil Classification System  plasticity
   chart.
SCAVENGER-One  who participates in  the uncon-
   trolled removal  of  materials at  any point in the
   solid waste stream.
SCOOTER-A three-wheeled satellite vehicle equipped
   with a flatbed, dump box, or packer body.
SCRAP • Discarded  or  rejected material  or  parts of
   material that result from manufacturing  or fabri-
   cating operations and are suitable for reprocessing.
   Home-Scrap that never leaves the manufacturing
     plant and is reprocessed there.   Also known as
     revert scrap.
   Obsolete-Scrap that results when  material becomes
     worn or  otherwise unusable for  its original
     purpose.
   Prompt Industrial-Scrap that  is left over from the
     fabrication of iron and steel products.
SCREEN
   Rotary-An  inclined, meshed cylinder  that rotates
     on its axis and  screens material placed in its
     upper end.
   Vibrating • An  inclined  screen  that  is  vibrated
     mechanically  and screens material placed on it.
SCRUBBER  See  FLUE   GAS  SCRUBBER   OR
   WASHER.
SECATOR-A  separating device that throws mixed
   material onto a rotating  shaft; heavy and resilient
   materials bounce off one side of the  shaft, while
   light and inelastic materials land on the other and
   are cast in the opposite direction.
SECONDARY MATERIAL-A material that is utilized
   in place  of a primary or raw material in manufac-
   turing a product.
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SEEP AGE-Movement  of water  or  gas through soil
   without forming definite channels.

SEPARATION-The systematic division of solid waste
   into designated categories.
SEPARATION CHAMBER See  SETTLING CHAM-
   BER.
SEPARATOR
   Ballistic • A  device  that  drops  mixed  materials
     having different  physical characteristics  onto a
     high-speed rotary impeller; they are hurled off
     at  different  velocities  and  land  in separate
     collecting bins.
   Inertial-A material separation device that relies on
     ballistic  or  gravity separation  of  materials
     having different physical characteristics.
   Magnetic-Any device that removes ferrous  metals
     by means of magnets.
SERVICE SITE-A residential unit, commercial estab-
   lishment, or  other  pick-up  point that receives
   periodic solid waste  collection service.

SETTLEMENT-A gradual subsidence of material.
   Differential-The nonuniform  subsidence of mate-
     rial from a fixed horizontal reference plane.

SETTLING CHAMBER-Any chamber  designed to
   reduce the velocity  of the  products of combustion
   and thus to promote the  settling of fly ash from
   the gas stream. See BAFFLE CHAMBER.

SETTLING VELOCITY-The velocity at which  a given
   dust  will fall out  of dust-laden gas under the
   influence of gravity  only.
SEWAGE SLUDGE-A semiliquid substance consisting
   of settled  sewage solids combined  with varying
   amounts of water and dissolved materials.

SEWAGE TREATMENT RESIDUES-Coarse  screen-
   ings, grit,  or sludge  from wastewater treatment
   units.
SHALE-A soft rock formed  of consolidated clay or
   silt.
SHEAR SHREDDER-A size  reduction machine that
   cuts material between two large blades or between
   a blade and a stationary edge.

SHREDDER-A machine that reduces discarded auto-
   mobiles  and  other  low-grade sheet  and  coated
   metal  in a continuous operation to fist-size pieces.

SIFTINGS-The fine materials  that fall from a fuel bed
   through its grate openings during incineration.
SILICA (Si02)-The  oxide of silicon, a major con-
   stituent  of fireclay refractories, alone or in chem-
   ical combinations.
SILICON CARBIDE-A refractory material that has a
   high  melting point,  is very  dense,  and resists
   abrasion.
SILT-Mineral soil  grains intermediate between clay
   and sand (0.05 to  0.002 mm in diameter). Water-
   borne sediment whose individual grains have diam-
   eters approaching  those of silt. Soil material that
   contains  at  least  80 percent  silt,  less than 12
   percent clay, and less than 20 percent sand.

SINTERING-A heat  treatment that causes adjacent
   particles of a material to cohere below a tempera-
   ture that would cause them to melt.
SLAG • A  mineral  substance  formed  by  chemical
   action and  fusion at furnace  operating temper-
   atures.
SLAGGING OF REFRACTORIES-Destructive chem-
   ical action that forms slag on refractories subjected
   to high  temperatures.  Also a  molten or viscous
   coating produced on refractories by ash particles.
SLOPE-The deviation of a surface from the horizon-
   tal expressed as a percentage, by  a ratio,  or in
   degrees.
SLOPS See SWILL.
SLOUGH-Wet or marshy area.
SLUDGE-A semi-liquid sediment.
SMOKE-An aerosol consisting of all  the dispersible
   particulates   produced by  the incomplete  com-
   bustion  of  carbonaceous  materials entrained in
   flue gas.
SMOKE ALARM-An instrument that continuously
   measures and records the  density  of  smoke by
   determining  how much light is obscured when a
   beam is shown through the smoke; an alarm fitted
   in a flue goes off when the smoke exceeds a preset
   density.
SMOKE  DENSITY-The amount of solid matter
   contained  in smoke;  it is often  measured by
   systems that  relate the grayness of the smoke to an
   established standard.
SMOKE EYE-A device consisting of a light source
   and a photoelectric cell that measures  the degree
   to which smoke in  a flue gas obscures light.
SOIL-The  unconsolidated natural surface material
   present above bedrock; it is either residual in origin
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   (formed by the in-place weathering of bedrock) or
   has been transported by wind, water, or gravity.
SOIL COHESION-The mutual attraction exerted on
   soil particles by  molecular  forces and moisture
   films.
SOIL PLASTICITY-The property of a soil that allows
   it to be deformed or molded in a moist condition
   without cracking or falling apart.
SOLID  WASTE • Useless,  unwanted,  or  discarded
   material with insufficient liquid content to be free
   flowing. See also WASTE.
   Agricultural-The solid waste  that results from the
      rearing and  slaughtering  of animals  and  the
      processing of animal products and orchard and
      field crops.
   Commercial • Solid  waste  generated by  stores,
      offices and other activities that do not  actually
      turn out a product.
   Industrial-Solid waste that results from industrial
      processes and manufacturing.
   Institutional-Solid wastes originating from educa-
      tional, health care, and research facilities.
   Municipal-Normally, residential and commercial
      solid waste generated within  a community.
   Pesticide -The residue resulting  from  the manufac-
      turing, handling, or use of chemicals for killing
      plant and animal pests.
   Residential-All solid waste that  normally originates
      in a residential environment. Sometimes called
      domestic solid waste.

SOLID  WASTE FILL See SANITARY LANDFILL.

SOLID  WASTE  MANAGEMENT • The purposeful,
   systematic  control  of  the  generation,   storage,
   collection, transport, separation, processing, recy-
   cling, recovery*, and disposal of solid wastes.
SOOT • Agglomerations  of tar-impregnated  carbon
   particles  that  form  when carbonaceous'material
   does not undergo complete combustion.
SPALLING  OF  REFRACTORIES-The breaking or
   crushing  of a  refractory unit due to  thermal,
   mechanical, or structural causes.
SPARK ARRESTER-A screen-like device that keeps
   sparks,  embers, or- other ignited materials  above a
   given size within an incinerator.
SPOIL-Soil or rock that has been removed from its
   original location.
SPOTTER-In truck use, the man who directs a driver
   into a loading or unloading position.
SPRAY CHAMBER-A chamber equipped with water
   sprays that cool and clean incinerator combustion
   products passing through the chamber.
STACK-A vertical passage through which products of
   combustion are conducted to the atmosphere.
STACK EFFECT-The vertical movement of hot gases
   in a stack that  results because  they are hotter
   (lighter) than the atmosphere.
STACK SAMPLING-The collecting of representative
   samples of gaseous and particulate  matter that
   flows through a duct or stack.
STERILIZATION-The destruction, by chemical  or
   physical means,  of a  microorganism's  ability  to
   reproduce; to render something barren.

STOICHIOMETRIC  AIR See AIR, Theoretical.
STOKER-A mechanical device to feed solid fuel  or
   solid waste to a furnace.
   Chain Grate «A stoker that has a moving chain as a
     grate  surface;  the  grate   consists  of  links
     mounted on rods to form a continuous surface
     that is generally driven by a shaft with sprock-
     ets.
   Incinerator-A mechanically operable moving grate
     arrangement for supporting, burning, and  trans-
     porting solid waste in a furnace and discharging
     the residue.
   Inertia! Grate-A stoker consisting of a fixed bed  of
     plates that is carried on rollers and activated by
     an electrically driven mechanism; it draws the
     bed  slowly  back  against a  spring  and  then
     releases it so that the entire bed moves forward
     until stopped  abruptly by another spring. The
     inertia of the  solid waste  carries  it a  small
     distance  forward along the stoker surface, and
     then the cycle is repeated.
   Oscillating Grate • A stoker of which the entire
     grate surface oscillates to move the solid waste
     and residue over the grate surface.
   Reciprocating Grate-A  stoker consisting of  a bed
     of bars  or  plates arranged  so that alternate
     pieces, or rows of pieces, reciprocate slowly in a
     horizontal sliding mode and act to  push the
     solid waste along the stoker surface.
   Rocking Grate -A  stoker consisting of a bed of bars
     or plates on axles. When the axles are rocked  in
     a coordinated  manner, the solid waste is  lifted
     and advanced along the surface of the grate.
   Rotary Kiln-A cylindrical inclined device that
     rotates, thus causing the solid waste to move  in
     a jow cascading and forward motion.
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   Traveling  Grate • A  stoker  that  is essentially a
     moving  chain belt carried on sprockets and
     covered with separated small metal pieces called
     keys. The entire  top surface can act as a grate
     while moving through the furnace but can flex
     over the sprocket  wheels  at  the end of the
     furnace, return under the furnace, and reenter
     the furnace over  sprocket wheels at the front.
STORAGE-The interim containment of solid waste,
   in an approved manner, after generation and prior
   to ultimate disposal.
STORAGE PIT-A pit  in which  solid waste is held
   prior to processing.
STREET REFUSE-Material picked up when streets
   and sidewalks are swept manually and mechani-
   cally.
SUBSIDENCE-Settling  or sinking of the land surface
   due to many factors such as the decomposition of
   organic material,  consolidation,  drainage,  and
   underground failures.
SUBSOIL-That part of the soil beneath the topsoil;
   usually does not have an appreciable  organic
   matter content.
SULFUR OXIDES (S0n)-Compounds of sulfur com-
   bined with oxygen that have a significant influence
   on air pollution.
SURFACE COMPACTION-Increasing the dry density
   of surface  soil by applying a dynamic load.
SURFACE CRACKING-Discontinuities that develop
   in the cover material  at a sanitary landfill due to
   the surface drying or settlement of the solid waste.
   (These discontinuities may result in the exposure
   of solid waste, entrance or egress of vectors, intru-
   sion of water, and venting of decomposition gases.)

SURFACE DUMP See DUMP.
SWILL-Semiliquid waste material consisting of food
   scraps and free liquids.
TAILINGS • Second grade or waste material derived
   when raw  material is screened or processed.
TEEPEE BURNER See BURNER, Conical.
TEMPERING AIR See AIR, Cooling.
TERMINAL  VELOCITY See SETTLING VELOCI-
   TY.
THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY • The  specific rate of
   heat flow per hour  through refractories or other
   substance  expressed  in Btu per sq ft of area, for a
   temperature difference of one degree Fahrenheit,
   and for a thickness of one inch expressed as Btu
   per  sq ft  per  hour in degrees  Fahrenheit and
   inches.
THERMAL EFFICIENCY-The ratio of heat used  to
   total heat generated.

THERMAL SHOCK RESISTANCE-The ability of a
   material to withstand sudden heating or cooling or
   both without cracking or spalling.
THERMOCOUPLE-Two lengths of wire, made from
   different kinds of homogeneous  metals, that  are
   connected to form a complete electric circuit; they
   develop an electromotive force when one junction
   is at a  different temperature than the other.
TIDAL MARSH-Low flat marshlands traversed by
   interlaced channels and  tidal sloughs and subject
   to tidal inundation; normally, the only vegetation
   present is salt-tolerant bushes and grasses.
TIPPING FLOOR-Unloading area for vehicles that are
   delivering solid waste to an incinerator or other
   processing plant.
TOE-The bottom of the working face at a sanitary
   landfill.
TOPSOIL-The topmost layer of soil; usually refers to
   soil that contains humus  and is capable of sup-
   porting good plant growth.
TOPOGRAPHIC MAP • A  map  indicating  surface
   elevations and slopes.
TOTAL COST  BIDDING-A method of establishing
   the  purchase price of  movable  equipment; the
   buyer  is guaranteed that maintenance will not
   exceed a set maximum amount during  a fixed
   period and that the equipment will be repurchased
   at a set minimum price when the period ends.
TOTE BARREL See CONTAINER, Canying.
TRANSFER STATION-A site at which solid waste is
   concentrated  and then taken  to a  processing
   facility or sanitary landfill.
TRANSPORT-The movement of solid  waste sub-
   sequent to  collection.
TRASH See RUBBISH.
TROMMEL See SCREEN, Rotary.
TUYERES • Openings or ports in  a grate  through
   which air can be directed to improve combustion.
UNDERFIRE AIR-Any forced or induced air, under
   control  as to quantity and direction,  that  is
   supplied beneath a grate and passes through a fuel
   bed.
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UNLOADING BULKHEAD-A steel plate that ejects
   waste out the rear doors of an enclosed transfer
   trailer. It is propelled by a telescoping, hydrauli-
   cally powered cylinder that traverses the length of
   the trailer.
UTILITY (PRIVATE)-A private  business that  col-
   lects,  processes,  and  disposes  of solid  waste
   under  a  government license or  monopoly  fran-
   chise.
VAPOR PLUME-Flue gas that is visible  when  it
   emerges from  a stack because it  contains con-
   densed water droplets or mist.
VECTOR
   Disease Vector • A carrier, usually  an arthropod,
     that is capable of transmitting a pathogen from
     one organism to another.

VITRIFICATION-A process  whereby high temper-
   atures effect permanent  chemical  and  physical
   changes  in a  ceramic body, most of which  is
   transformed into glass.

VOLATILE MATTER-The material lost from a dry
   solid waste sample  that is heated until it is red in a
   closed crucible.

VOLATILE SOLIDS-The material lost from a dry
   solid waste sample that is heated until it is red in
   an open crucible  in  a  ventilated  furnace. The
   weight of the volatile solids is equal to that of the
   volatile matter plus that of the fixed carbon.
WALL
   Air  Cooled • A  refractory  wall  that has  a lane
     directly behind it through which cool air flows.
   Battery-A double or common wall between two
     incinerator combustion  chambers; both faces
     are exposed to heat.
   Bridge-A partition  between chambers over which
     pass the products of combustion.
   Core-In a battery  wall,  those  center courses of
     brick, none of which are exposed  on either side.
   Curtain-A refractory construction  or baffle that
     deflects combustion gases downward.
   Insulated • A furnace  wall  on  which  refractory
     material is installed over  insulation.
   Refractory A wall made of heat resistant material.
   Sectionally-Supported • A furnace or boiler  wall
     which consists of special  refractory blocks or
     shapes that are mounted on and supported at
     intervals of height by metallic hangers.
   Unit  Suspended-A  furnace wall or panel that is
     hung from a steel structure.
   Water-Cooled-A furnace wall composed  of boiler
      tubes.
WASTE See also SOLID WASTE.
   Bulky Waste-Items whose large size precludes  or
      complicates their handling by normal  collec-
      tion, processing, or disposal methods.
   Construction and Demolition Waste-Building mate-
      rials  and rubble resulting from construction,
      remodeling, repair,  and demolition operations.
   Hazardous Waste-Those wastes that require special
      handling to avoid illness or injury to persons or
      damage to property.
   Wood Pulp  Waste-Wood or paper fiber residue
      resulting from a manufacturing process.
   Special  Waste-Those wastes  that require extraor-
      dinary management.
   Yard Waste-Plant clippings, prunings, and other
      discarded material from yards and gardens. Also
      known as yard rubbish.
WASTE PROCESSING-An operation  such  as shred-
   ding, compaction, composting, and incineration, in
   which  the  physical or  chemical  properties  of
   wastes are changed.
WASTE  SOURCES • Agricultural,  residential, com-
   mercial, industrial activities that generate wastes.
WATERSHED-Total  land area above a given point on
   a stream or  waterway that contributes runoff  to
   that point.

WATER TABLE-The upper limit of the part of the
   soil or  underlying  rock material that is  wholly
   saturated with water.
   Perched Water-A water  table, usually of limited
      area, maintained above the normal free-water
      elevation by  the  presence  of an  intervening,
      relatively impervious stratum.

WET DIGESTION-A solid waste stabilization process
   in which mixed solid organic wastes are placed in
   an  open  digestion  pond to  decompose  anaer-
   obically.

WET LINE KIT-A system used in conjunction with
   an enclosed  transfer trailer to power its unloading
   bulkhead.   The  bulkhead's  hydraulic pump  is
   driven  by  a  power-take-off unit on the semi-
   tractor's transmission.

WET MILLING-The mechanical size reduction  of
   solid wastes that have been  wetted to soften the
   paper and cardboard constituents.

WET PULPING See WET MILLING.
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WETTING  AGENT-A chemical  that reduces  the
   surface tension of water and enables it to soak into
   porous material more readily.
WHITE GOODS-Discarded kitchen and other large,
   enameled appliances.
WINDBOX • A chamber  below  a furnace  grate  or
   surrounding a  burner, through which air  is sup-
   plied under pressure to burn the fuel.
WORKING  FACE-That portion of a sanitary landfill
   where waste is discharged by collection trucks and
   is compacted prior to placement of cover material.
YARD TRACTOR-A small semi-tractor used  exclu-
   sively  for  maneuvering  transfer trailers into and
   out of loading position.

ZONE OF AERATION-The area above a water table
   where  the interstices (pores) are not  completely
   filled with water.

ZONE OF CAPILLARITY-The area above a water
   table where some or all of the interstices (pores)
   are filled with water that is held by capillarity. See
   CAPILLARY WATER.
                                           BIBLIOGRAPHY
            1. I.I.A. incinerator standards. New York, Incinerator Institute of America, May 1966. 31 p.
            2. BUSINESS  & DEFENSE SERVICES ADMINISTRATION.  Iron & steel scrap consumption
                 problems. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, Mar. 1966. 52 p.
            3. SCHWARTZ, D.  Lexicon of incinerator terminology. In Proceedings; 1964 National Incinerator
                 Conference,  New York, May 18-20, 1964. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, p.
                 20-31.
            4. Elements of solid waste management. [Training course manual in solid wastes.] [Cincinnati], U.S.
                 Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Sept. 1968. [140 p.] [Restricted distribution.]
            5. AMERICAN PUBLIC  WORKS ASSOCIATION.   Municipal refuse disposal.  3d ed. Chicago,
                 Public Administration Service, 1970. 538 p.
            6. USA standard for domestic gas-fired incinerators. New York, American Gas Association, 1967. 32
                 P-
            7. HANKS, T.G.   Solid  waste/disease relationships, a literature survey.  Public Health Service
                 Publication No. 999-UIH-6. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1967. 179 p.
            8. Glossary  of boiler and  electric  utility  terms;  lexicon of American Boiler Manufacturers
                 Association.  In G.R. Fryling, ed. Combustion  engineering. Rev. ed.  New York,  Combustion
                 Engineering,  Inc., 1967. p. Bl-36.
            9. Glossary of soil and water terms.  Special Publication SP-04-67.  St. Joseph, Michigan, American
                 Society of Agricultural Engineers, Jan. 1967. 61 p.
           10. Committee report-glossary of soil science terms. Soil Science Society of America Proceedings;
                 29(3):330-351, May-June, 1965.
           11. NATIONAL AIR POLLUTION CONTROL ADMINISTRATION.  Unpublished Glossary,  1969.
           12. Terminology of forest service technology practice and products. Washington, Society of American
                 Foresters, 1971. 349 p.
           13. Proceedings,  1964  National  Incinerator Conference, New York,  May  18-20,  1964. American
                 Society of Mechanical Engineers. 180 p.
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