Logo

ASTM D5907-10

Historical Revision

Standard Test Method for Filterable and Nonfilterable Matter in Water

$83.00

$83.00

$149.40

$0.00

$0.00

$0.00



Sub Total (1 Item(s))

$ 0.00

Estimated Shipping

$ 0.00

Total (Pre-Tax)

$ 0.00


Stay effortlessly up-to-date with the latest standard revisions. When new versions are released, they're automatically charged and delivered to you, ensuring seamless compliance.

...

1.1 These test methods cover the determination of filterable matter, total dissolved solids (TDS), and nonfilterable matter, total suspended solids (TSS), in drinking, surface, and saline waters, domestic and industrial wastes. The practical range of the determination of nonfilterable particulate matter (TSS) is 4 to 20 000 mg/L. The practical range of the determination of filterable matter (TDS) is 10 mg/L to 150 000 µg/g.

1.2 Since the results measured by this test are operationally defined, careful attention must be paid to following the procedure as specified.

1.3 The test methods appear in the following order:

Filterable Matter (TDS) and
Nonfilterable Matter (TSS), mg/L
Sections 10-14
Total Dissolved Solids
High Precision Method, µg/g
Sections 15-19

1.4 This standard does not purport to address all of the safety concerns, if any, associated with its use. It is the responsibility of the user of this standard to establish appropriate safety and health practices and determine the applicability of regulatory limitations prior to use. For a specific hazard statement, see Section 8.

Solids, both as filterable matter (TDS) and nonfilterable matter (TSS), are important in the treating of raw water and wastewater, and in monitoring of streams.

Waste solids impose a suspended and settleable residue in receiving waters. Suspended and soluble materials provide a matrix for some biological slime and, in sufficient quantity, impair respiration of organisms. These solids may create nuisance slime beds and odors while imposing a long-term biological oxidation load over limited receiving water areas.

Knowledge of suspended and soluble materials is important in treating raw water supplies. Knowledge of solids loading can aid in determining the type or amount of treatment, or both, necessary to make the water acceptable for use. Such information may also be used to determine acceptability of water after treatment. Too little treatment may not be desirable and excess treatment costs money.

Stream monitoring is important for environmental reasons, such as compliance with discharge permits. Stream improvements, water pollution monitoring, mass wasting, algal studies, and sediment loads are but a few of the many reasons streams are monitored.

SDO ASTM: ASTM International
Document Number D5907
Publication Date May 15, 2010
Language en - English
Page Count 9
Revision Level 10
Supercedes
Committee D19.05
Publish Date Document Id Type View
May 1, 2018 D5907-18 Revision
June 1, 2013 D5907-13 Revision
May 15, 2010 D5907-10 Revision
May 1, 2009 D5907-09 Revision
June 10, 2003 D5907-03 Revision
Jan. 1, 1996 D5907-96A Revision