Title: ENSC 412612 Week 2 Air Quality, Standards, Sources
1ENSC 412/612 Week 2Air Quality, Standards,
Sources
- READINGS FOR THIS WEEK
- Text CHAPTERS 4,6,22
2Air Quality
- Ambient air quality -- refers to concentrations
of pollutants in OUTDOOR AIR (differentiate from
INDOOR AIR POLLUTION) - Pollutant concentrations are highly variable in
space and time WHY?
3- variations in emission rate
- variations in transport and diffusion mechanisms
in atmosphere - scavenging and conversion in the atmosphere --
pollutant half-life - Ambient concentrations are typically cyclic
What are the cycles?
4- annual variation in PM10 shows influence of dust
episodes in late winter / early spring as roads
dry out
- PM2.5 levels are highest in fall and winter due
to combustion combined with stagnation events
NOTE figures from Suzuki and Wallis, 2003.
5- PM10 diurnal variation responds to traffic
(dust)
- PM2.5 can see the influence of fumigation
events (late morning) on the 95th and 98th
percentiles
6- hebdomodal variability shows higher levels of
PM10 during the week reflecting traffic and work
patterns that generate dust (episodes caused by
dust sources)
- PM2.5 have somewhat lower median and mean values
during weekends, but 95 and 98th percentile
values show no weekly trend (episodes caused by
combustion sources which operate 24/7)
7Cycles of ambient pollutant levels
- diurnal (source strength, transport and
diffusion) - weekly (weekend vs weekday emission differences)
- seasonal (source strength, transport and
diffusion)
8Diurnal cycle
9Impact of averaging time
10Trends
- Changes from year to year are trends.
11Trends in PM10/PM2.5
1995
1997
1999
2003
2005
2007
2001
12National Trends in O3 and PM2.5
13Primary and secondary pollutants
- Substances emitted directly to the atmosphere are
PRIMARY POLLUTANTS. - Chemical reactions among primary pollutants and
with the atmosphere form SECONDARY POLLUTANTS.
14Responses to Air Pollution
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17Sources - Natural
-
- volcanos - particulates, SO2, H2S, methane, etc.
can affect globe - forest fires - smoke, unburned HC, CO, CO2, NOx,
ash - dust storm
- oceans - salt aerosols
- plants / trees - major source of HC - blue
haze'' over forests is a reaction of volatile
organics - pollen, bacteria, rust, etc.
18Sources - Anthropogenic
- Industrial stationary, consistent emissions,
mostly from manufacturing products from raw
materials - iron from ore
- lumber and paper from trees
- gas from crude oil
- stone from quarries
- Also when products are made into new products
- cars from steel
- furniture from lumber
- paint from solids and solvents
- asphalt from rock and oil
19Anthropogenic Sources contd
- 2. Utilities Power generation (e.g. coal
burning to generate electricity) sewage
treatment (sludge burning) burning dump (not
common anymore) - 3. Personal sources
- automobiles
- home furnaces
- home fireplaces
- BBQ
- backyard burning of garden wastes
20Personal Sources
- In our society, total personal sources are
greater than both industrial and utility sources
combined. Personal sources are probably the most
difficult to control since they require the
cooperation (subjugation?) of a large number of
individuals and usually involve extra expense
and/or lifestyle changes, eg - regulations
- lifestyle changes
- change fuel to one with less emissions
- improve efficiency
- change form of pollution (eg. haul leaves to the
dump instead of burning them)
21Combustion
- One of the most widely used but least understood
chemical reactions (it is a free radical chain
reaction). - the rapid union of a substance with oxygen
accompanied by the emission of light and heat. - used mostly for heat by changing the potential
chemical energy of the fuel to thermal energy. - also used as a means of destruction of unwanted
materials. The volume of solids is reduced,
combustible gases with odours etc., are converted
to less objectionable gases. - C O2 ? CO2
- 2H2 O2 ? 2H2O
22- Products of burning are carbon dioxide and water,
which are odourless and invisible. - Problems occur because the process also produces
other products, many of which are pollutants
carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, oxides of
sulfur, oxides of nitrogen, smoke, fly ash,
metals, metal oxides, metal salts, aldehydes,
ketones, acids, polynuclear hydrocarbons, etc. - It was only recently that these by products were
considered important due to their negative
impacts.
23- Efficient combustion requires 3T's
- time (to occur fully),
- temperature (to initiate and maintain), and
- turbulence (to ensure that the reacting fuel and
oxygen molecules in the combustion process are in
intimate contact). - The physical state of the fuel determines how
combustion will occur. - A fuel can be a volatile material - burns with a
flame fixed carbon - no visible flame or both.
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25- Gaseous fuels burn easily
- liquid fuels must first be vapourized either by
supplying heat, or by atomizing the fuel and then
spraying it into a heated combustion chamber to
accomplish gasification. - solid fuels such as coal or wood require several
steps to burn (drying, distillation, carbon
burning, ash discharge)
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27- Typical emissions from combustion
28Stationary Sources
- See text Chapter 6 for a discussion of various
stationary sources. (Chemical, Resins and
Plastics, Varnish and Paints, Acid manufacture,
Soaps and detergents, Phosphate fertilizers,
Inorganic chemicals, Petroleum and coal, Primary
metals, Stone and clay products, Forest products,
Noxious trades (smell, eg animal processing).
29Mobile Sources
- Vehicles powered by different types of engines,
using different fuels. - Largest source in western society.
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31Emission Inventories
- A list of the amount of pollutants from all
sources entering the air of a given area over a
given period of time. - This information is very useful to control
agencies, as well as land use planners - what are the sources and what are their relative
sizes? - Can be used
- as input into dispersion models to predict
ambient pollution levels, - design a sampling network (both location and type
of sampling), and - assess impact of pollutants on various areas.
32EI- continued
- Estimation methods are error prone however.
Creating an inventory involves the following
steps - list types of sources in an area
- determine which pollutants are emitted from each
- find emission factors for each pollutant (amount
of pollutant produced for each unit of input into
the process, eg fuel) - determine number and size of specific sources in
area - multiply numbers and sum to find total emissions
- There is a lot of variation in emission factors.
- Emission factors for a number of sources can be
found at the US EPA's web site (http//www.epa.gov
).
33Air Quality Standards
- Objective of air quality management is to control
emissions so that ambient concentrations do not
exceed standards. - Toward this the federal NAAQO's were established
(National Ambient Air Quality Objectives). - There are three criteria levels
- level A - maximum desirable'' long-term goal
and is also the basis for an anti-degradation
policy in unpolluted areas - level B - maximum acceptable'' provide
adequate protection against effects of pollutants
on human health and discomfort, soil, water,
vegetation, animals, and visibility. - level C - maximum tolerable'' concentration
beyond which action is required quickly to
protect health of general population.
341.
2.
3.
4. Also for PM2.5 Canada Wide Standard in
2010 will be 98th percentile of 30 µg / m3
averaged over 3 years (can exceed 30 only 2 of
the time 7 days / year), and BCMoE have a PM2.5
objective of 25 µg / m3 for a 24 hour average, 8
µg / m3 for an annual average with 6 µg / m3 as
the goal.
35- Levels are defined based on laboratory and
epidemiological experiments and studies.
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39Readings for next week
- Text chapters 28, 29, 30, 31
- Millar (2007) paper