Title: Sulfur Cycle
1Sulfur Cycle
- The sulfur cycle is relatively complex in that it
involves several gaseous species, poorly soluble
minerals, and several species in solution. - The sulfur cycle has both gaseous and sedimentary
phases. Sulfur occurs in a gaseous form, as H2S
and SO2 and a solid form as sulfate, sulfide and
organic sulfur in soil and in the body of living
organisms. - The residence time of sulfur in the atmosphere is
very small and its main reserve pool is found in
the soil. Sulfur enters the atmosphere from
several sources - - the combustion of fossil fuels
- - volcanic eruption
- - exchange at the surface of the oceans
- - gases released by decomposition
2- The sulfur enters the atmosphere initially as
H2S, which quickly interact with O2 to form SO2.
The SO2 and H2S in atmosphere return to the
surface in rainwater/soil as sulfate or sulfuric
acid along with rain. - The sulfur cycle is tied with the oxygen cycle in
that sulfur combines with oxygen to form gaseous
SO2, an atmospheric pollutant, and soluble SO42-. - Among the significant species involved in the
sulfur cycle are gaseous H2S volatile dimethyl
sulfide (CH3)2S, released to the atmosphere by
biological processes in the ocean mineral
sulfides, such as PbS H2SO4, the main
constituent of acid rain and biologically bound
sulfur in sulfur-containing proteins. - The most significant part of the sulfur cycle is
the present of pollutant SO2 gas and H2SO4 in the
atmosphere. SO2 is a toxic gaseous air pollutant
from the combustion of sulfur-containing fossil
fuels.
3- Sulfur in soluble form is taken up by plants and
incorporated through a series of metabolic
processes, starting with photosynthesis, into
sulfur-bearing amino acids. - Sulfur found in living organisms is essential for
the synthesis of certain amino acids such as
cystine, cyctein, and methionine, the peptide
glutathione, enzyme cofactors like thiamine,
biotine, thioctic acid and certain vitamins. - From the producers, sulfur in amino acid is
transferred to consumers through food chains.
With the decay of dead bodies of organisms and
plants, sulfur comes back to the soil, ponds,
lakes and seas, where bacteria release it as
hydrogen sulfide or sulfate. - In the decomposer system, fungi like Aspergillus
and Neurospora under aerobic conditions, and
bacteria like Escherichia and Proteus in
anaerobic conditions, are responsible for the
decomposition of sulfur containing proteins.
4- In anaerobic conditions and sediments, H2S is
formed by sulphate reducing bacteria like
Desulphonovibrio desulfuriccans. The bacteria
utilize the oxygen in the sulfate molecule to
obtain energy and in turn reduce the sulfate in
deep sediments to H2S gas. - SO42- 2CH2O 2H H2S 2CO2
2H2O - Under anaerobic condition, sulfur will
precipitate as ferrous sulfide (FeS2) in the
iron-rich materials. The FeS2 is highly insoluble
and it is firmly held in mud and wet soil. - Some chemoautotrophic bacteria (Thiothrix and
Thiobacillus chemoautotrophic), oxidize H2S to
S and then S to sulfate. -
- 2H2S O2 2H2O 2S energy
- 2S 3O2 2H2O 4 H 2SO42-
energy
5- Some of the photosynthetic bacteria like the
green sulfur bacteria (Chlorobium sp.) and purple
sulfur bacteria (Chromatium sp.) utilize H2S as a
source of hydrogen to reduce CO2 to produce
glucose. - CO2 H2S
(CH2O)n S H2O Energy - Some other nutrients, such as Fe, Cu, Ca, Co, Zn
etc become available when react with S. For
example, Fe is precipitated out as FeS2 and
become available to organisms.
Solar energy, bacteria chlorophyll
6The Sulfur Cycle
Atmospheric sulfur, SO2, H2S, H2SO4, CS2, (CH3)2S
Interchange of atmospheric sulfur species with
other environmental spheres
Inorganic SO42- in both soluble and insoluble
forms
S oxidation
Elemental sulfur, S
H2S oxidation
Assimilation by organisms
Decomposition
Sulfides as H2S and as metal sulfides, such as FeS
Biological sulfur, including SH groups
Biodegradation
Microbial metabolism
S
Microbially produced organic sulfur in small
molecules, largely as SH and R-S-R groups
Xenobiotic sulfur like P- groups in insecticides
7The sulfur cycle. Note the 2 components
sedimentary and gaseous. Major sources from human
activity are the burning of fossil fuels and
acidic drainage from coal mines
8Acid Rain
- The term acid rain also known as acid
precipitation is commonly used to mean the
deposition of acidic components in rain, snow,
dew, or dry particles. The more accurate term is
"acid precipitation." 1 Acid rain occurs when
sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides are emitted
into the atmosphere, undergo chemical
transformations and are absorbed by water
droplets in clouds. The droplets then fall to
earth as rain, snow, mist, dry dust, hail, or
sleet. This increases the acidity of the soil,
and affects the chemical balance of lakes and
streams
9Next
- Acid rain is defined as any type of precipitation
with a pH that is unusually low.4 Dissolved
carbon dioxide dissociates to form weak carbonic
acid giving a pH of approximately 5.6 at typical
atmospheric concentrations of CO2.5 Therefore a
pH of less than 5.6 has sometimes been used as a
definition of acid rain.6 However, natural
sources of acidity mean that in remote areas,
rain has a pH which is between 4.5 and 5.6 with
an average value of 5.0 and so rain with a pH of
less than 5 is a more appropriate definition.7
The US EPA says, "Acid rain is a serious
environmental problem that affects large parts of
the US and Canada" 8 Acid rain accelerates
weathering in carbonate rocks and accelerates
building weathering. It also contributes to
acidification of rivers, streams, and forest
damage at high elevations. When the acid builds
up in rivers and streams it can kill fish
10Emissions of chemicals leading to acidification
- The most important gas which leads to
acidification is sulfur dioxide. Emissions of
nitrogen oxides which are oxidized to form nitric
acid are of increasing importance due to stricter
controls on emissions of sulfur containing
compounds. 70 Tg(S) per year in the form of SO2
comes from fossil fuel combustion and industry,
2.8 Tg(S) from wildfires and 7-8 Tg(S) per year
from volcanoes - The principal cause of acid rain is sulfuric and
nitrogen compounds from human sources, such as
electricity generation, factories and motor
vehicles. Coal power plants are one of the most
polluting. The gases can be carried hundreds of
kilometres in the atmosphere before they are
converted to acids and deposited. Factories used
to have short funnels to let out smoke, but this
caused many problems, so now, factories have
longer smoke funnels. The problem with this, is
those pollutants get carried far off, where it
creates more destruction.
11Chemistry in cloud droplets
- When clouds are present the loss rate of SO2 is
faster than can be explained by gas phase
chemistry alone. This is due to reactions in the
liquid water droplets - Hydrolysis
- Sulfur dioxide dissolves in water and then, like
carbon dioxide, hydrolyses in a series of
equilibrium reactions - SO2 (g) H2O ? SO2H2O
- SO2H2O ? HHSO3-
- HSO3- ? HSO32-
- Oxidation
- There are a large number of aqueous reactions
that oxidise sulfur from S(IV) to S(VI), leading
to the formation of sulfuric acid. The most
important oxidation reactions are with ozone,
hydrogen peroxide and oxygen (reactions with
oxygen are catalysed by iron and manganese in the
cloud droplets).
12Acid deposition
13Surface waters and aquatic animals
- Both the lower pH and higher aluminium
concentrations in surface water that occur as a
result of acid rain can cause damage to fish and
other aquatic animals. At pHs lower than 5 most
fish eggs will not hatch and lower pHs can kill
adult fish. As lakes become more acidic
biodiversity is reduced. Acid rain has eliminated
insect life and some fish species, including the
brook trout in some Appalachian streams and
creeks
14Effect
- Soils
- Soil biology can be seriously damaged by acid
rain. Some tropical microbes can quickly consume
acids13 but other microbes are unable to
tolerate low pHs and are killed. The enzymes of
these microbes are denatured (changed in shape so
they no longer function) by the acid. The
hydronium ions of acid rain also mobilize toxins
and leach away essential nutrients and minerals. - Forests and other vegetation
- Acid rain can slow the growth of forests, cause
leaves and needles to turn brown and fall off and
die. In extreme cases trees or whole areas of
forest can die. The death of trees is not usually
a direct result of acid rain, often it weakens
trees and makes them more susceptible to other
threats. Damage to soils (see above) can also
cause problems. High altitude forests are
especially vulnerable as they are often
surrounded by clouds and fog which are more
acidic than rain. - Human health
- Some scientists have suggested direct links to
human health, but none have been proven.2.
However, fine particles, a large fraction of
which are formed from the same gases as acid rain
(sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide), have been
shown to cause illness and premature deaths such
as cancer and other deadly diseases15 For more
information on the health effects of aerosol.
15- Oxygen Cycle
- Oxygen is present in large quantities (29.95) in
the atmosphere There are 2 significant sources of
atmospheric oxygen - Breakup of water vapor through a process driven
by sunlight. H2O is dissociated to produce H2 and
O2. Most of the H2 escapes into space. - (ii) Photosynthesis process. O2 is produced by
green plants and consumed by both plants and
heterotrophic organisms in respiration, so that
there is a balance between the amount of O2
production and utilization.
- The oxygen cycle involves the interchange of
oxygen between the elemental form of gaseous O2
and chemically bound O in CO2 and H2O, minerals,
and organic matter. It is strongly tied with
other elemental cycles, particularly the carbon
cycle.
16- Elemental oxygen becomes chemically bound by
various energy-yielding processes, particularly
combustion and metabolic processes in organisms. - Combustion of fossil fuels such as CH4
- CH4 O2 CO2 2H2O
- Elemental oxygen also oxidizes inorganic
substances such as Fe(II) in minerals - 4FeO O2 2Fe2O3
- Dissolved oxygen in water is the source of oxygen
for aquatic life. - The other main reservoirs of O2 are H2O and CO2.
All the reservoirs are linked through
photosynthesis. O2 is also biologically
exchangeable in sulfates and nitrates, which
organisms transform to ammonia and hydrogen
sulfide.
17- Some carbon dioxide combines with calcium to form
carbonates. Oxygen combines with nitrogen
compounds to form nitrates, with iron to form
ferric oxides, and with other minerals to form
oxides. In these states, oxygen is temporarily
withdrawn from circulation. - Another phase of oxygen is ozone layer of the
outer stratosphere of the atmosphere which
protects life from ionizing short wave radiations
(ultraviolet).
18The Oxygen Cycle
Atmospheric oxygen O2
Organic molecules C6H12O6
Components of living mater
Respiration
Photosynthesis
Nutrient uptake
Nutrient pool
CO2
H2O
19Oxygen exchange among the atmosphere, geosphere,
hydrosphere and biosphere