Menu
0
Total price
0 €
PRICES include / exclude VAT
Homepage>BS EN ISO 5815-1:2019 Water quality. Determination of biochemical oxygen demand after n days (BODn) Dilution and seeding method with allylthiourea addition
sklademVydáno: 2019-11-27
BS EN ISO 5815-1:2019 Water quality. Determination of biochemical oxygen demand after n days (BODn) Dilution and seeding method with allylthiourea addition

BS EN ISO 5815-1:2019

Water quality. Determination of biochemical oxygen demand after n days (BODn) Dilution and seeding method with allylthiourea addition

Format
Availability
Price and currency
Anglicky Secure PDF
Immediate download
247.28 €
You can read the standard for 1 hour. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 1 hour
24.73 €
You can read the standard for 24 hours. More information in the category: E-reading
Reading the standard
for 24 hours
74.18 €
Anglicky Hardcopy
In stock
247.28 €
Označení normy:BS EN ISO 5815-1:2019
Počet stran:32
Vydáno:2019-11-27
ISBN:978 0 539 12152 0
Status:Standard
DESCRIPTION

BS EN ISO 5815-1:2019


This standard BS EN ISO 5815-1:2019 Water quality. Determination of biochemical oxygen demand after n days (BODn) is classified in these ICS categories:
  • 13.060.70 Examination of biological properties of water
  • 13.060.50 Examination of water for chemical substances

This document specifies the determination of the biochemical oxygen demand of waters by dilution and seeding with suppression of nitrification after 5 d or 7 d incubation time.

It is applicable to all waters having biochemical oxygen demands usually between 1 mg/l and 6 000 mg/l. It applies particularly to waste waters but also suits for the analysis of natural waters. For biochemical oxygen demands greater than 6 000 mg/l of oxygen, the method is still applicable, but special care is needed taking into consideration the representativeness of subsampling for preparation of the dilution steps. The results obtained are the product of a combination of biochemical and chemical reactions in presence of living matter which behaves only with occasional reproducibility. The results do not have the rigorous and unambiguous character of those resulting from, for example, a single, well-defined, chemical process. Nevertheless, the results provide an indication from which the quality of waters can be estimated.