Glossary
Auto Body Shops
Pollution Prevention Guide
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Carbon Monoxide (CO) - A colorless and odorless gas that is formed
during incomplete combustion. Potential sources of CO include cigarette smoke,
fossil fuel combustion, and automobile exhaust.
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) - Chemicals used for refrigeration, air
conditioning, aerosol sprays, and plastics. CFCs released into the atmosphere
migrate high above the earth where they break down to form chlorine gas. Chlorine
gas can destroy the ozone layer.
Compost - The controlled microbial decomposition of organic matter,
such as yard waste and food scraps, in the presence of oxygen into a humus-
or soil-like material.
Energy - The ability to do work. Electricity is a form of energy that
is transferred by moving electrons.
EPA Identification Number - A 12-digit code used to track hazardous
waste from the point of generation to the disposal facility. A business must
obtain this number if their hazardous waste is sent to a treatment, storage,
and disposal (TSD) facility and they are a Small or Large Generator.
Flash Point - Minimum liquid temperature at which a spark or flame
causes an instantaneous flash in the vapor space above the liquid.
Groundwater - Water that occurs beneath the surface of the earth, unsaturated
soil, or the interstices of bedrock.
Halogenated Solvent - Chemicals, such as chlorine, bromine, fluorine,
astatine, and iodine, that contain one or more of the halogen elements. Most
halogenated solvents contain chlorine and are referred to as chlorinated solvents.
Halogenated solvents are usually very toxic to humans and the environment if
improperly handled or disposed of.
Hazardous Air Pollutants (HAPs) - Chemicals that cause adverse health
effects including cancer, birth defects, nervous system damage, and possibly
death. Potential sources of HAPs may include some printers, drycleaners, and
vehicles.
Hazardous Material - A material that because of its quantity,
concentration, or physical, chemical, or infectious characteristics, may pose
a threat to human health and the environment.
Hazardous Waste - A waste or combination of wastes that, because of
its quantity, concentration or physical, chemical, or infectious characteristics,
may pose a threat to human health and the environment.
Heavy Metals - Hazardous elements, including mercury and lead, which
may be found in the waste stream as part of discarded items such as batteries
and lighting
Incineration - The controlled burning of municipal solid waste to reduce
volume and, in some cases, to recover energy.
Landfill - The disposal of solid waste at engineered facilities in
a series of compacted layers on land and the daily covering of the waste with
soil. Fill areas are managed in such a way as to prevent nuisances or public
health hazards.
Leachate - A liquid that has entered, passed through, or emerged from
solid waste.
Lumen - The quantitative measure of a lamps’s brightness. A 75 Watt
incandescent bulb has 1,200 lumens, whereas a 18 Watt compact fluorescent bulb
has 1,100 lumens.
Manifest - The shipping document, originated and signed by the generator,
that is used to identify the hazardous waste, its quantity, origin, and destination.
Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) - Document produced by the manufacturer
that provides a variety of information about a product, such as its flash point,
ingredients, and precautions for safe handling and use. All hazardous chemical
manufacturers and distributors are required by the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration to provide MSDSs.
Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) - Emissions limitations
based on the best demonstrated control technology or practices. This is a very
high level of pollution control.
Nonpoint Source (NPS) - Pollution that originates from precipitation
or irrigation flowing through the soil, carrying pollutants to surface water
or groundwater. NPS pollution is a major contributor to declining water quality
in Montana.
Ozone - A gas consisting of three oxygen atoms. High concentrations
of naturally-occurring ozone gas are found high above the earth’s surface. This
ozone layer shields the earth against harmful ultraviolet rays from the sun.
Point Source (PS) - Pollution that comes from a discernible, confined,
or discrete conveyance such as a pipe, ditch, channel, tunnel, well, or container.
Pollution Prevention (Source Reduction) - The design, manufacture,
purchase, or use of materials to reduce the amount or toxicity of waste.
Post-Consumer Recycling - The reuse of materials generated from residential
and commercial waste, excluding recycling of material from industrial processes
that has not reached the consumer, such as glass broken in the manufacturing
process.
Power - The rate at which energy is, or could be, transferred. Power
is typically metered in kilowatts.
Solid Waste Management Facility - A facility, such as a container site,
transfer station, or landfill, designed to temporarily or permanently contain
solid waste.
Recycle - The process by which materials are collected, reprocessed
or remanufactured, and reused.
Reuse - The use of a material more than once in its same form, either
for the same purpose or for a different purpose.
Run-off - Any rainwater, leachate, or other liquid that drains over
the land from any part of a facility.
Run-on - Any rainwater, leachate, or other liquid that drains over
the land onto any part of a facility.
Scrubbers - Pollution control devices used in industry to remove aerosols
and waste gases through the use of water, activated charcoal, or filters.
Septic System - A buried tank where wastes are collected from a house
or business. Lighter particles float to the surface, heavy particles sink to
the bottom, and the remaining liquid flows through a pipe system to a drainfield
in the soil. Some solids are digested by bacteria; the rest must be pumped out.
Smog - A mixture of pollutants, primarily ground-level ozone (product
of chemical reactions in the air involving volatile organic compounds,
nitrogen oxides, and sunlight). Smog can harm humans and the environment and
can cause poor visibility.
Solid Waste - All putrescible and non-putrescible wastes, including
garbage, rubbish, sludge from sewage treatment plants, dead animals, appliances,
construction and demolition debris, and wood waste.
Source Reduction (Pollution Prevention) - The design, manufacture,
purchase, or use of materials to reduce the amount or toxicity of waste.
Storage - The actual or intended containment of wastes, either on a
temporary basis or for a period of years.
Sump - Subsurface chamber, usually beneath a floor drain, designed
to capture the solids in shop wastewater.
Transfer Efficiency - A measure of how much paint actually coats a
surface compared to how much is applied.
Transporter - A person engaged in the off-site transportation of hazardous
waste by air, rail, highway, or water.
Treatment - A method, technique, or process, including neutralization,
designed to change the physical, chemical, or biological character or composition
of any hazardous waste to neutralize the waste or render it non-hazardous, safer
for transport, amenable for recovery, amenable for storage, or reduced in volume.
Treatment, Storage, and Disposal (TSD) Facility - See individual definitions
above.
Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) - Organic compounds that if released
into the atmosphere can form ozone in the presence of heat and sunlight.
VOCs include gasoline fumes, benzene, solvents such as toluene and xylene, and
tetrachloroethylene. Many VOCs are also HAPs (for example benzene, causes
cancer).
Waste Stream - A term describing the total flow of solid waste from
homes, businesses, and institutions that must be recycled, incinerated, or disposed
of in landfills.
Wastewater Disposal - The disposition of treated wastewater to a receiving
water, either groundwater or surface water.
Wastewater Treatment - Inactivation of disease-causing organisms and
decomposition of constituents of the wastewater so that it will not cause harm
in the receiving water.
Water Conservation - Activities designed to reduce the demand for water,
improve efficiency in use, and reduce the waste of water.
Watt - A measure of how much electric energy is flowing, or can flow,
through a particular electrical device or circuit in one hour.
(Glossary
of 18 fact sheet series)
Montana State University
Extension Service
Pollution Prevention Program Taylor Hall Bozeman, Montana 59717
funded by
The United States Environmental Protection Agency
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