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Page 1: Chapter 17

Chapter 17Air Pollution• Natural Sources

– Volcanoes– Deserts – Decomposition

• Human Sources– Auto Emissions – Power Plant Emissions – Chemical Plant Emissions

• The Difference– Human Sources can be controlled and prevented, natural

sources cannot.

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Chapter 17

Why is Air Pollution a Concern?

• Gravity tends to hold denser gasses close to Earth’s surface, many pollutants are fairly dense so…

• Well known examples of deadly episodes– London, Eng: 4000 killed– Donora, PA: 17 killed 5900 sick

• Chronic Issues, too– Mexico City: 6400 death each year

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Chapter 17Primary Air Pollutants –5 types• Carbon Monoxide (CO)

– Causes—incomplete combustion of gas, coal, wood trash, etc

– Largest source is Automobile– 2nd Largest Tobacco Smoke– Small concentrations can result in death

• 0.001% for several hours is enough

– Not persistent

• HydroCarbons– Causes—incomplete combustion, evaporation from fuel

—automobiles, refineries, industries.– Engine modifications help

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Chapter 17• Particulates <10 microns

– Very small pieces of solids– Causes—particles from fire, asbestos from

brakes, dust/ash from industry– Aesthetic/Cancer Causing– Accumulate or carrier

• Sulfur Dioxide (SO2)– Causes—burning of fossil fuels with S– Irritate lungs and forms acids when mixed

• 1306 London banned use of S rich coals• 1952 inversion of S rich air poll. kills 4000

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Chapter 17

• Oxides of Nitrogen (NOx, NO, NO2)– Causes—automobile– Catalytic converters help– Involved in production of Photochemical Smog

Secondary Air Pollutants

• Photochemical Smog – Interaction of NOx with UV light– Results in ground level ozone– Usually reddish-brown haze

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Chapter 17– Ground Level Ozone formation

• Rush hour N2 +O2 -> 2NO• + atmospheric O2 2NO+O2 -> 2NO2• + UV light NO2 +UV ->NO + O• + atmospheric O2 O2 + O -> O3

– Ozone is oxidizer and highly reactive• Reacts with living tissue

– Lungs– Chlorophyll in plants

– Geography and climate influence formation– Valley ringed by mountain—bad– Solution—get rid of IC cars or move city

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Chapter 17

• Other air pollutants– Lead– Toxics– Radon

• Control of Air Pollution– Solutions depend on willingness of

governments, industry and individuals to make changes

• Pollution control in cars

• Particulates

• SOx

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Chapter 17• The Clean Air Act (1967, rev 70,77, 90)• 4 Categories of programs

– 1. All new/existing sources are subject to ambient air quality regs.

– 2. New sources subject to more stringent control technology and permitting

– 3. Control of specific pollution problems including haz. Air emissions and visisbility impairment

– 4. Comprehensive permit program

• Air quality standards for SO2, NOx, particulates, CO, O3, and lead

• State responsibility for implementing SIPs

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Chapter 17

The Clean Air Act (cont’d)

• Ways to go but program has been successful

• Emissions of 6 worst pollutants down 33%

• Benefits outweigh costs by 40 to 1

• Still, smog may affect 6 million asthmatics and may send 160,000 people to emergency room each year

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Chapter 17Acid Rain• Acid deposition can be natural or man-made

– Volcanoes, vegetation, lightning– Coal burning, automobiles

• Can be wet or dry– Wet with rain or snow– Dry with settling of particles– All processes called ACID RAIN

• Effects– Aesthetics on buildings/monuments– Forests, aquatic ecosystems, soil, etc– Not as big an issue in Texas as NE US and Canada

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Chapter 17Global Warming

• Lots of unknowns but many agree it is potential future reality with human causes

• How does it work?– Greenhouse gasses allow sunlight to pass through

but reflect/absorb resulting heat energy from earth.– CO2 is most abundant GH gas

• Increase from 315 ppm to 362 ppm in 40 years

• Can counter with increases in energy efficiency and uptake/sequestration.

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Chapter 17

Global Warming (cont’d)

• Chlorofluorocarbons (CFC)• Small amounts released but highly effective

• 15,000 times that of CO2

– Banned for most part in US, Canada, Europe– Releases are expected to continue to decline– Major effects on ozone layer

• Methane and NO– Also involved in global warming but limited

ability to control releases

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Chapter 17Effects of Global Warming• Worsening Health Effects

– Exacerbate smog/ground level ozone– More disease/wider range of disease/vectors– More heat more heart attacks etc

• Rising Sea Level– Loss of coastal land– More flooding

• Disruption of Water Cycle– Greater Droughts/Floods

• Changing Forests and Natural Areas– Range Shifts by 300 miles– Change in composition

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Chapter 17Effects of Global Warming (cont’d)• Challenges to Agriculture/Food Supply

– May increase yields in some areas– Increase irrigation demand too– Can likely cope with changes

• Many unknown effects• Feedback loops on global cycle?• Politics and Economics will ultimately

decide our contribution to reduce global warming

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Chapter 17

Ozone Depletion• Ozone is O3• Absorbs harmful effects of UV radiation high up

in atmosphere– 99% of UV light is prevented from reaching earth

• Prevents cancer, cataracts and mutations

• CFCs destroy ozone and prevent reforming– 20-30 yrs to reach upper atmosphere– Can react for up to 120 yrs

• Ozone depletion will worsen well into next century based on prior releases


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