Lecture 5.2 Air Pollution
Lecture 5.2 Air Pollution
Products
Particulates, sulfur
dioxide, carbon dioxide,
Reactants nitrogen oxides, etc.
Fuel and Oxygen (O2)
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Pure Fuels “Dirty” Fuels
Only contain the fuel. Additional non-combustible
elements mixed in with the
fuel.
Release carbon dioxide Release carbon dioxide,
and water vapor as sulfur, ash, and much more.
products.
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1.
Atmosphere
Composition of each layer.
➢ The thermosphere blocks harmful radiation
from the sun.
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➢ In thermal inversions, the
normal temperature
patterns reverse.
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➢ Urban atmosphere on a normal day:
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➢ Urban atmosphere during a thermal inversion:
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2.
Air Pollution
Most common forms and how they’re regulated.
➢ In 1948, a steel town in Pennsylvania called Donora experienced
a 5-day thermal inversion.
▻ A smog containing fluoride, sulfur, and other pollutants
released by the coal-burning steel and zinc plants sickened
thousands.
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➢ In 1952, London experienced an
exceptionally cold winter,
forcing people to burn a lot of
coal to keep their homes warm.
▻ Released a lot of sulfur
dioxide and particulates.
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➢ The Clean Air Act was signed into law in 1970 in response to
public outrage following incidents like in Donora and London.
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Sulfur Dioxide (SO2)
➢ Colorless, rotten egg
smell.
➢ Biggest source is
coal-burning power
plants.
➢ Causes burning in the
respiratory tract.
➢ Forms sulfuric acid
when it reacts with
water in the
atmosphere.
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Nitrogen Oxides (NOx)
➢ Reddish-brown, sharp-
sweet smell.
➢ Biggest sources are
automobiles and
denitrification of fertilizer
by soil bacteria.
➢ Causes burning of the
respiratory tract.
➢ Forms nitric acid, smog,
and ozone in the
atmosphere.
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Carbon Monoxide (CO)
➢ Colorless and odorless.
➢ Any fuel-burning device
can produce it: furnaces,
cars, hot water tanks.
➢ Blocks oxygen absorption
in blood, causing dizziness
and eventually death.
➢ No secondary pollutants.
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➢ Large tunnels have
ventilation fans to
prevent the buildup
of carbon monoxide
and nitrogen oxides
during heavy traffic
periods.
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Particulate Matter (PM)
➢ Visible as smoke, dust,
or soot.
➢ Biggest sources are
coal-burning power
plants and
construction sites.
➢ Particles can become
embedded the
respiratory tract,
worsening asthma.
➢ No secondary
pollutants. 20
PM2.5 particles are <2.5 μm (microns)
in diameter and can reach the deepest
part of the lungs.
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Lead (Pb)
➢ Metal that can
become embedded in
particulates.
➢ Biggest source used
to be cars until leaded
gas was banned.
▻ Now aviation fuel a
and coal plants.
➢ Neurotoxin.
➢ No secondary
pollutants.
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Ground Level Ozone (O3)
➢ Colorless gas.
➢ Not released into the air
directly -- created from
nitrogen oxides (NOx) and
volatile organic
compounds (VOCs).
➢ Highly reactive to living
tissues.
➢ Ozone IS a secondary
pollutant.
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Volatile Organic
Compounds (VOCs)
➢ Carbon-based liquids that
quickly evaporate.
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➢ In 1990, the Clean
Air Act was
amended with
several additions to
cover issues that
were still not being
addressed:
▻ Acid rain
▻ Urban smog
▻ Ozone depletion
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➢ Acid precipitation has a pH lower than normal rain.
▻ Normal rain has a pH of about 5.6 due to carbonic acid.
▻ Acid rain has a pH of 4.2-4.4 due to sulfuric and nitric acid.
10x more
acidic
Normal rain
Acid Rain
▻ Erodes limestone
structures.
▻ Lowers the pH of
surface waters.
▻ Leaches aluminum
from soils into
surface waters. 28
➢ Acid precipitation
mostly affects the
northeast, due to the
amount of industry,
dense population,
and prevailing winds.
▻ Has improved
significantly since
1990.
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➢ In 1985, scientists discovered a hole forming in the ozone layer
in the stratosphere, directly above Antarctica.
➢ The cause was found to be CFCs – chlorine-containing gases
used in spray cans and as refrigerants.
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The Montreal
Protocol is an
international
agreement to
discontinue the
use of chlorine-
based aerosols
and refrigerants.
➢ Near complete
recovery
expected by
the mid-21st
century.
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➢ Photochemical smog is a mixture of secondary pollution that
forms on sunny days from nitrogen oxides and volatile organic
compounds (VOCs).
Catalysts
CO2
VOCs
H2O
CO
N2
O2
NO2
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➢ The Clean Air Act required all
industry to cut sulfur dioxide
emissions in half by:
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➢ Stacks must be 500 feet to reach above potential thermal
inversions.