ACID PRECIPITATION

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Transcript ACID PRECIPITATION

ACID PRECIPITATION
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ACIDS & BASES

•
Acid – loses a H+ when dissolved in H2O
•
organic (contain C) e.g. amino acids or acetic acid
(CH3COOH)
inorganic like HCl or H2SO4

Base – releases OH- when dissolved in water
•
eg. NaOH or NaHCO3

amount of acidity is measured on pH scale
 low pH (< 7) indicates acidity
 high pH (> 7) indicates alkalinity (basic)
 pH of 7 is neutral
Deposition

source: pollution associated with burning of
fossil fuels; leads to acid deposition.

Wet Deposition - acids with a pH below 5.6 are
removed from the atmosphere in the form of
rain, snow, sleet, and mist.

Dry Deposition - particles such as volcanic ash,
sulphates, and nitrates are deposited onto a
surface and then converted into acids when they
contact water.
Acid Deposition
Sulphur dioxide (SO2)
 sulphur
from coal burning power plants is
the greatest amount of SO2 entering the
atmosphere
 need to reduce sulphur emissions
 best way: conserve energy or use
alternative sources
3 ways to reduce sulphur emissions from coal-fired
plants:
1.Wash the sulphur from the coal before
combustion
2.Wash the sulphur from the smoke before it
leaves the smokestacks
3.Remove the sulphur after combustion by using
scrubbers - sprays a mixture of water and
limestone (basic) into the smokestack
Nitrogen Oxides (NOX)
 from
vehicle emissions and burning coal
 catalytic converters on vehicles help to
reduce the emissions of carbon monoxide,
hydrocarbons, and the nitrogen oxides
 ON vehicles have to pass an emissions
test every two years
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Govt. policies

Canada-Wide Acid Rain strategy:
•
implemented in 1991
• targeted reduction by 50% in most provinces
• 1990-2000 AP decreased by 60% in some eastern
provinces

•
Canada – US Clean Air Quality Agreement:
US emissions declined by 27% between 1991-1996.
Changes in SO2 1990-2000
Acid Rain in Canada
THE EAST:
 Canadian Shield & East Coast provinces
(Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick)
are hardest hit
 their water and soil systems can't neutralize the
effects of the acid rain
 > 150 lakes are “dead” and 48 000 are at risk of
acid rain destruction
 > 90% of the acid deposition in eastern Canada
originates from emissions in the US Midwest
 acid-rain-invisible-menace
THE WEST
 western provinces are relatively unharmed
 soils are more alkaline - able to neutralize
acid rain
 lower levels of industrialization and natural
factors such as eastwardly moving
weather patterns (moves the air pollution
to the east)
Natural Acid Precipitation
Volcanic Fog “vog” (SO2)
Lightning (NOx)
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