Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD) 1


Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD) 1 : Also called biochemical oxygen demand, refers to the amount of oxygen that would be consumed if all the organic materials in a one liter water sample were oxidized by bacteria and protozoa. Additional Info: BOD is good measure of the contamination level of a water supply. It is used primarily for waters that receive pollution from sewage and industrial wastes. The first step in a BOD determination is taking a water sample from the test area and diluting it with a known volume of distilled water. The solution is then thoroughly shaken to insure oxygen saturation. The amount of dissolved oxygen is determined and the sample is sealed and placed in darkness for five days so as not to stimulate algal growth. During this five day incubation period, microorganisms in the sample will decompose the organic materials and consume oxygen in the process. The dissolved oxygen is then measured again. The difference between the initial and final readings is directly proportional to the amount of organic material in the original sample. BOD's are generally expressed as milligrams of dissolved oxygen perliter, which is equivalent to parts per million, PPM. BOD levels can vary considerably. Pristine water sources may show a BOD of less than 2 mg/L of water. Raw sewage typically has BOD readings in the hundreds of mg/L and food-processing wastes may be in the thousands of mg/L. Dissolved oxygen (DO) levels are crticially important to aquatic life. Aquatic systems with high BOD's may have very low dissolved oxygen levels (2 to 4 mg/L DO versus 8 mg/L DO or healthy water bodies), particularly if there are no mechanisms for introducing oxygen such as waterfalls, dams, rapids etc. Low dissolved oxygen levels can cause (or be a major contributing factor) to fish kills and "dead zones". MSDS Relevance: The ANSI MSDS format includes a section on ecological section. BOD may appear in this area to indicate how readily the material is decomposed by naturally occurring microorganisms. Ecological information may be required MSDS content in countries other than the US. See also: Decomposition, Hypoxia
No records Found
afaatim.com copyright © April 2016 Dr.K.R.Kamaal. All rights reserved