Air Pollution
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Transcript Air Pollution
Chapter 20
We
live at the bottom of a thin layer of
gases surrounding the earth
• Atmosphere
The
Atmosphere is made up of several
layers
We live in the troposphere
Above the troposphere is the
stratosphere
Troposphere
1st layer of atmosphere
Extends 11 miles
above Earth
78% N, 21% O
Chemical cycling of
nutrients happens here
Weather & Climate
happen here
Water vapor present
Stratosphere
2nd layer of atmosphere
Extends from 11 – 30
miles above Earth’s
surface
More ozone (O3)
present here
Less water vapor
Atmospheric
Pressure
• A measure of the mass per unit of air
Pressure
of atmosphere increases at the
density increases
• A volume of air with a high density has more gas
molecules than air at a lower density (D = m/v)
• Atmospheric pressure decreases with altitude
Ex: At sea level, your body is bombarded with more
gas molecules than your body would be at the top of a
mountain
In the
diagram,
notice that
as altitude
decreases,
the
atmospheric
pressure
increases.
Another graph: As altitude decreases, atmospheric pressure increases.
Ozone
(O3)
• Found in 2nd layer of
atmosphere
(stratosphere)
• Filters our most of
the sun’s harmful UV
rays
Ultraviolet rays –
dangerous to
organisms, can cause
cancer
• Created when
oxygen molecules
interact with UV
radiation emitted by
the sun
How ozone is created
Air Pollution
• Presence of chemicals in the atmosphere in
concentrations high enough to affect climate and
harm organisms
• Range from annoying to lethal
Sources
• Majority of air pollution comes from natural
sources
• Ex: dust blowing across the land; organic
chemicals released by plants, forest fires,
volcanic eruptions, and sea spray
Primary
Pollutants
• Pollutants emitted directly into the troposphere
in a potentially harmful form
Ex: soot, carbon monoxide (CO)
Secondary
Pollutants
• When some primary pollutants react with one
another or with the air to form a new pollutant
Ex: SO2, H3SO4
U.S. cities
typically have higher outdoor
pollution levels than rural areas
Due
to prevailing winds, the city
pollutants are spread to rural areas
Indoor
air pollutants come from
infiltration of outdoor pollutions into the
building
Most
people believe CO2 is a pollutant
EPA
(Environmental Protection
Agency)disagrees
• Too much pressure from oil and coal companies?
• Repercussions if listed as pollutant by EPA?
CO2
IS a pollutant because:
1) It’s found in high concentrations in the air
• ANY chemical in high concentrations in the air can become a
pollutant
2) We have been increasing CO2 concentrations in the
troposphere by burning fossil fuels & clearing CO2absorbing trees faster than they can grow back
• No way to get rid of CO2
3)
The troposphere is warming & there is
considerable evidence that additional CO2
added by humans is the cause
• Greenhouse gas – warms the Earth
UV
Rays
http://www.youtube.
com/watch?v=npBBJyl-go
Air
Pollution
http://www.youtube.
com/watch?v=e19Vo
A2SApM&feature=rel
ated
Photochemical
reaction
Any chemical
reaction activated by
light (photo= light)
Ex: Photochemical
smog
Photochemical
smog
• A mixture of air
pollutants formed
by the reaction of
nitrogen oxides
(NO and NO2 )and
volatile organic
hydrocarbons
• Activated by light
Photochemical
Smog formation
Smog
pollutants:
NO2, NO3 (nitrogen
oxides)
Ozone
Nitric acid
Aldehydes
Peroxyacyl nitrates
(PANs)
Sources
of smog
pollutants:
Automobile engines
Coal-burning plants
Industrial plants
Vegetation
Certain
trees & plants
can contribute to
photochemical smog
Ex: oak, sweet
gums,
poplars, kudzu
They
release volatile
organic compounds
(VOCs)
• Ingredient in smog
Trees
planted in nonurban areas release their
VOCs, which are dispersed into the
atmosphere
• They do not make a significant contribution to the
formation of photochemical smog
Trees
planted in / near urban areas with high
levels of NOx (nitrogen oxides) and sunlight,
will create high levels of VOCs
Environmentalists’ view: widespread planting
of trees in urban areas BUT only those who emit
low VOCs
Industrial
smog
• A mixture of sulfur
dioxide, droplets of
sulfuric acid, and a
variety of particles
emitted by burning
coal and oil
• When burned, carbon
in coal and oil is
converted to CO2 and
CO
Some of this ends up in
atmosphere as
ingredient of smog
Industrial
smog
• Also known as: gray-air-smog
Not
a big problem in developed
countries
• Good pollution control when coal & oil are
burned
It
IS a big problem in industrialized
urban areas of:
• China, India, Ukraine, Slovakia, Poland, Hungary,
and Czech Republic
Factors
that decrease outdoor air pollution:
• Precipitation
Rain & snow help to cleanse the air, lowering pollution
• Sea Spray
Can wash out particulates & water-soluble pollutants
from air that flows from land onto the oceans
• Wind
Can sweep pollutants away or dilute them
Pollutants are blown somewhere else
Can be deposited onto surface waters, soil, buildings
Factors
that increase outdoor air pollution:
• Urban buildings
Slow wind speed
Reduce dilution / removal of pollutants
• Hills and Mountains
Reduced the flow of air in valleys below them
Allows pollutants to build up at ground level
• High temperatures
Promote chemical reactions leading to photochemical smog
• Grasshopper effect
Transfers air pollutants from tropical / temperate areas to the
earth’s poles
Reason for high levels of pollutants, decreasing ozone in poles
Keep in mind that the warm air rises in the temperate /
tropical areas and will condense once it reaches the
colder temperatures (earth’s poles).
Temperature
Inversion
• Occurs when cool, dense air is trapped under a
warm, less dense air
• These two air masses do not mix
• As a result, pollutants in the air can be concentrated
in the lower layer of cool air (closest to the earth)
Effects of
temperature
inversion
Asian
brown cloud (industrial smog)
2 miles thick
Caused by huge emissions of ash, smoke,
dust, acidic compounds (from burning
coal), burning trees (to plant crops), dust
blowing from desserts
As the cloud travels it picks up many
pollutants
Impacts:
Effects
the amount of solar energy hitting earth
• Impacts of crop production
• Damage trees
• Can kill organisms in lakes
Illnesses
& premature deaths
• Respiratory diseases
Particles
in cloud are causing climate change
• Changes temperature pattern, rainfall shifts
• Can effect El Nino (which could affect North & South
America)
South Asia’s
Brown Cloud
Acid deposition / acid rain:
• Mixture of wet deposition & dry deposition
• Wet deposition: acid rain, snow, fog, cloud vapor
pH is less than 5.6
• Dry deposition: acidic particles
Composed of:
• Sulfur dioxide (SO2)
• Nitrogen oxides (NO2 and NO)
• Particulates
Acid Deposition / Rain
Some
soils contain
chemicals which
buffer acidic
deposition / rain:
• Calcium carbonate
(CaCO3)
• Limestone
Chemicals
neutralize
acids
• Bring pH closer to 7
Harmful
effects of acid deposition / rain:
• Human respiratory diseases
Bronchitis, asthma
• Can leach toxic chemicals into drinking water
Lead, copper
• Damages statues, monuments, buildings, metals
Including car finishes, eats away / dissolve certain types of rock
• Can kill aquatic life if pH drops too low
• Acid shock
Damage to aquatic life due to runoff of large amounts of
highly acidic water
Effects
of acid rain on plants and soil:
• Can deplete soil nutrients
Calcium and Magnesium
• Release toxic ions into the soil
• Weaken plants
If pH of soil drops below 5.1
• Calcium deficiencies in plants can be passed to the
organisms who eat them
Ex: birds eating these plants could have problems with egg
production (shell made of calcium)
Synergistic
effect
• When the interaction of two or more factors’
combined effect is greater than the sum of their
separate effects
Clean
Air Act
• Has helped reduce
some of the harmful
impacts of acid
deposition
Solutions
to acid deposition:
Prevention (BEST solutions)
• Improve energy efficiency
• Reduce coal use or burn low-sulfur coal
• Increase natural gas use and renewable energy
• Remove SO2 particulates and NOx from smokestack gases
• Fees for SO2 emissions
Cleanup
• Add lime or phosphate fertilizer to neutralize acidified lakes
Controlling
acid deposition / rain is a challenge:
• The people who cause acid rain and the people or
ecosystems affected by it are quite distant
• Countries with large supplies of coal (which produces
acid rain) want to use coal for energy
• Coal-burning power plants say it’s too costly to install
equipment to reduce harmful emissions
Environmentalists
idea- Use alternative energy
sources (wind turbines, natural gas)
Cleanup
of acid rain in lakes & soil
• Add limestone (or lime) to neutralize
• Called “liming”
• Problems:
Expensive
Needs to be repeated annually (temporary fix)
Can kill some aquatic plants, plankton, wetland plants
• Possible solution:
Add phosphate fertilizer to neutralize
Effectiveness still being evaluated
Thermal Inversion demonstration
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LPvn9qhVFbM
Thermal Inversion in the real world
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pkOuBUXwiyA
Asia’s Pollution Super Cloud
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYYK-2sDN4U
Coal combustion & Acid Rain
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HE6Y0iEuXMQ
Go to hippocampus link
On the left-hand side of the screen click “Earth
Science”
Click “Environmental Science for AP”
Scroll down the middle of the page
Watch the following videos:
• Earth’s atmosphere
• Ozone
• Photochemical smog
• Air pollution