Dictionary Definition
turbidity n : muddiness created by stirring up
sediment or having foreign particles suspended [syn: turbidness]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
Turbidity is the cloudiness or haziness of a fluid caused by
individual particles
(suspended
solids) that are generally invisible to the naked eye,
similar to smoke in
air. The measurement of
turbidity is a key test of water
quality.
Fluids can contain
suspended solid matter consisting of particles of many different
sizes. While some suspended material will be large enough and heavy
enough to settle rapidly to the bottom container if a liquid sample
is left to stand (the settleable
solids), very small particles will settle only very slowly or
not at all if the sample is regularly agitated or the particles are
colloidal. These small
solid particles cause the liquid to appear turbid.
Causes and effects of turbidity
Turbidity in open water may be caused by growth of phytoplankton. Human activities that disturb land, such as construction, can lead to high sediment levels entering water bodies during rain storms, due to stormwater runoff, and create turbid conditions. Urbanized areas contribute large amounts of turbidity to nearby waters, through stormwater pollution from paved surfaces such as roads, bridges and parking lots.The higher the turbidity level, the higher the
risk of that people may develop gastrointestinal
diseases. This is especially problematic for immune-compromised
people, because contaminants like viruses or bacteria can become attached to
the suspended solid. The suspended solids interfere with water
disinfection with chlorine because the particles
act as shields for the virus and bacteria. Similarly, suspended
solids can protect bacteria from
ultraviolet (UV) sterilisation of water.
High turbidity levels can block light from
reaching lower depths of water bodies, which can inhibit growth of
submerged aquatic
plants and consequently affect other species dependent on those
plants, such as fish and
shellfish. This
phenomenon has been regularly observed throughout the Chesapeake
Bay in the eastern United
States.
For many mangrove areas, high turbidity
is needed to support certain species, such as to protect juvenile
fishes from predators. For most mangroves along the eastern coast
of Australia, in
particular Moreton Bay,
turbidity levels as high as 6 Nephelometric Turbidity Units (NTU)
are needed for proper ecosystem functioning.
Measurements of turbidity
The most widely used measurement unit for
turbidity is the FTU (Formazin Turbidity Unit). ISO refers to its
units as FNU (Formazin Nephelometric Units).
There are several practical ways of checking
water quality, the most direct being some measure of attenuation (that is,
reduction in strength) of light as it passes through a sample
column of water. The alternatively used Jackson Candle method
(units: Jackson Turbidity Unit or JTU) is essentially the inverse
measure of the length of a column of water needed to completely
obscure a candle flame viewed through it. The more water needed
(the longer the water column), the clearer the water. Of course
water alone produces some attenuation, and any substances dissolved
in the water that produce color can attenuate some wavelengths.
Modern instruments do not use candles, but this approach of
attenuation of a light beam through a column of water should be
calibrated and reported in JTUs.
A property of the particles — that they
will scatter a light beam focused on them — is considered
a more meaningful measure of turbidity in water. Turbidity measured
this way uses an instrument called a nephelometer with the
detector setup to the side of the light beam. More light reaches
the detector if there are lots of small particles scattering the
source beam than if there are few. The units of turbidity from a
calibrated nephelometer are called Nephelometric Turbidity Units
(NTU). To some extent, how much light reflects for a given amount
of particulates is dependent upon properties of the particles like
their shape, color, and reflectivity. For this reason (and the
reason that heavier particles settle quickly and do not contribute
to a turbidity reading), a correlation between turbidity and
total
suspended solids (TSS) is somewhat unique for each location or
situation.
Turbidity in lakes, reservoirs, and the ocean can
be measured using a Secchi disk.
This black and white disk is lowered into the water until it can no
longer be seen; the depth (Secchi depth) is then recorded as a
measure of the transparency of the water (inversely related to
turbidity). The Secchi disk has the advantages of integrating
turbidity over depth (where variable turbidity layers are present),
being quick and easy to use, and inexpensive. It can provide a
rough indication of the depth of the euphotic
zone with a 3-fold division of the Secchi depth. However, this
cannot be used in shallow waters where the disk can still be seen
on the bottom.
Turbidity normally increases after heavy rain.
The rain runs along the ground picking up small particles of dirt
before emptying into water sources, hence increasing turbidity
levels. These increased levels can harm the fish that live in them.
The fish can stop eating, cough, and have reduced growth rates, in
high turbid areas, until they eventually die.
Turbidity in air, which causes solar beam
attenuation, is used as a measure of pollution. To model the
attenuation of beam irradiance, several turbidity parameters have
been introduced, including the Linke turbidity factor (TL).
Standards and test methods
Drinking water standards
Governments have set standards on the allowable turbidity in drinking water. In the United States, the allowable standard is 0.3 NTU, with many drinking water utilities striving to achieve levels as low as 0.1 NTU.Ambient water standards
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has published water quality criteria for turbidity. These criteria are scientific assessments of the effects of turbidity, which are used by states to develop water quality standards for water bodies. (States may also publish their own criteria.) Some states have promulgated water quality standards for turbidity, including:- Louisiana. 25, 50 or 150 NTU, or background plus 10 percent, depending on the water body.
- Vermont. 10 NTU or 25 NTU, depending on water body classification.
- Washington. 5 NTU over background (when background is 50 NTU or less), or 10 percent increase when background is over 50 NTU.
Analytical methods
Published analytical test methods for turbidity include:- ISO 7027 "Water Quality: Determination of Turbidity"
- US EPA Method No. 180.1, "Turbidity"
- "Standard Methods," No. 2130B.
External links
- Water on the Web - turbidity
- "Understanding Turbidity." United States Geological Survey (USGS)
- USGS field manual on measuring turbidity
- BAMO International - turbidity measurement
- Lenntech - turbidity measurements
References
turbidity in German: Trübung
turbidity in Spanish: Turbidez
turbidity in French: Turbidité
turbidity in Hebrew: עכירות
turbidity in Dutch: Troebelheid
turbidity in Polish: NTU
turbidity in Romanian: Turbiditate
turbidity in Russian: Прозрачность воды
turbidity in Ukrainian: Прозорість
води
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
adiaphanousness,
agitation, bluster, bobbery, boil, boiling, brouhaha, bustle, churn, cloudiness, commotion, conturbation, darkness, dimness, dirtiness, discomposure, disorder, disquiet, disquietude, disturbance, ebullition, embroilment, excitement, ferment, fermentation, fever, feverishness, fidgets, flap, flurry, fluster, flutteration, foment, fume, fuss, hubbub, hurly-burly,
imperviousness to light, inquietude, intransparency, jitters, jumpiness, maelstrom, malaise, miriness, moil, muckiness, muddiness, nerviness, nervosity, nervousness, obscurity, ooziness, opacity, opaque, opaqueness, perturbation, restlessness, roil, roiledness, rout, row, seethe, seething, slabbiness, slobbiness, sloppiness, sloshiness, sludginess, slushiness, squashiness, squelchiness, stir, swirl, to-do, trepidation, trepidity, tumult, tumultuation, turbidness, turbulence, turmoil, twitter, unease, unrest, upset