Title: Impact of Technologies on the Atmosphere
1Impact of Technologies on the Atmosphere
- London or Industrial Smog
- Los Angeles or Photochemical Smog
2Atmosphere is divided into regions based on
temperature changes
Cunningham/Saigo, Environmental Science,
6th,McGraw-Hilll, NY, 2001, 376
3Industrial or London Smog
- Pollution in the Troposhere
4Fossil Fuel Risks London Smog
- Smog is the combination of the words, smoke and
fog - When smog is produced by burning of coal (C and
3 S and minerals) it is called London or
Industrial Smog - Named after city of London where in a 5 day
period in December of 1952 it contributed to
deaths of 8000 people
5Cause of London Smog
Hill/Kolb, Chemistry for Changing Times, 7th,
Prentice Hall, NJ,1995, 347
6Formation of London Smog - Carbon Reactions
- Some C burns to produce CO2
- C O2 ? CO2
- Some C burns to form CO
- 2 C O2 ? 2 CO
- Some C remains unburned and makes up smoke and
soot
7Formation of London Smog - Sulfur Reactions
- S burns to produce SO2
- S O2 ? SO2
- Further air oxidation produces SO3
- 2 SO2 O2 ? 2 SO3
- SO3 ultimately produces sulfuric acid
- SO3 H2O ? H2 SO4
8Formation of London Smog - Particulate Matter
- Particulate matter - solid or liquid particles of
greater than molecular size - Large particles are visible as dust and smoke
while small particles of 1 ?m (called aerosols)
are invisible - Minerals do not burn but form small particles
that are carried out in smoke as fly ash
9Health Effects of London Smog Carbon Monoxide
- CO bonds reversibly to iron in hemoglobin more
strongly than does O2 blocking the transport of
O2 - Oxygen deprivation causes heart to work harder -
heart attack possible
10CO bonds more tightly to hemoglobin than does
oxygen causing oxygen deprivation to living cells
Hill/Kolb, Chemistry for Changing Times, 7th,
Prentice Hall, NJ,1995, 353
11Bloomfield, Chemistry and the Living Organism,
5th, Wiley, NY, 1997, 385
12Effects of London Smog Particulates S-compounds
- Particulate matter of soot and fly ash plus the
sulfur oxides and sulfuric acid all cause severe
lung damage - The alveoli lose their resilience making it
difficult to expel the CO2 - leads to emphysema,
which can be fatal - Sulfur compounds also damage plants, farm crops
and produce acid rain
13Remediation of S-Damage
- Source reduction - can remove S from the coal by
pulverizing and exposing to magnet to remove FeS2
- expensive - End-of-pipe treatment - allow the SO2 to form and
then absorb it in lime - The waste CaSO3 must then be disposed of in a
landfill
14Removal of SO2 from Effluent Stream
Chang, Chemistry, 5th, McGraw Hill, NY, 1994, 727
15Photochemical or Los Angeles Smog
- Pollution in the Troposphere
16The Cause of LA Smog
Chang, Chemistry, 5th, McGraw Hill, NY, 1994, 727
17Fossil Fuel Risks Smog (LA)
- High temperature combustion using air as source
of oxygen (such as in the engine of an
automobile) produces NO - N2 O2 ? 2 NO (colorless gas)
- NO reacts spontaneously with O2
- 2 NO O2 ? 2 NO2 (dark brown gas)
18Downtown LA on a Smoggy Day
Hill/Kolb, Chemistry for Changing Times, 7th,
Prentice Hall, NJ,1995, 352
19LA or Photochemical Smog
- Sunlight causes the production of ozone
- Ozone reacts with hydrocarbons in gasoline to
produce aldehydes - Hydrocarbons also react with NO2 and O2 to
produce peroxyacetylnitrates (PAN) CH3COO-ONO2
20Formation of Photochemical Smog
Hill/Kolb, Chemistry for Changing Times, 7th,
Prentice Hall, NJ,1995, 354
21Conc.of Air Pollutants vs Time in Los Angeles
Chang, Chemistry, 5th, McGraw Hill, NY, 1994, 729
22Health Effects of Photochemical Smog
- Aldehydes and PAN are eye and lung irritants
- Ozone is capable of impairing the elasticity of
lungs causing death if sufficient exposure
23Effect of Ozone on Rubber Tires
Ozone breaks the double bond between carbon atoms
in rubber causing tires to lose elasticity and to
crack
Chang, Chemistry, 5th, McGraw Hill, NY, 1994, 727
24Remediation of LA Smog - Catalytic Coverter
Tro, 226