Title: METEOROLOGY
1METEOROLOGY
2Chapter Twelve
3What we are going to learn?
- We are going to learn the answers to the
following questions - What are the major sources of pollution?
- What are primary and secondary pollutants?
- Why does PM-10 pose the greatest risk to human
health? - Health problems associated with CO, SO2, VOCs,
NOx? - What is Smog? London-type and Los Angeles-type
smog? - Stratospheric vs tropospheric zone which is
beneficial? - What is PSI scale?
- How does atmospheric stability influence the
accumulation of air pollutants?
4Historical Background of air pollution
- Major sources of pollutants car exhaust,
chimneys, power plants, factories, forest fires
other anthropogenic activities - 1/6th of world population in urban areas
continuously exposed to health hazards from air
pollutants - Air pollution is as old as the invention of fire
smoke problem - King Edward I (1273) Declared a proclamation to
stop using sea coal, a dirty form of coal (soot
and SO2) - 1850s London had serious pea-soup fog, a thick
mixture of smoke and fog that hung over the city - 1873 700 people died due to these fogs
- 1911 1150 people in London died of smog
(combination of smoke and fog) - 1952 Major smog lasting for 5 days leading to
4000 peoples death - 1956 Passage of Clean Air Act in London
5History of Air Pollution
- In US, industrial revolution brought air
pollution - By 1940s Air in some cities was polluted that
the auto-mobile headlights had to be turned on
during the day - 1948 Donora (PA), industrial pollutants got
trapped in the Monongahela River valley, gt20
people died, thousands became ill - 1960s Air pollution levels dangerously high in
NY city - In LA, heavy smog due to large petroleum-processin
g plants automobiles first alert toward the
end of WW-II - 1970 Clean Air Act was passed emission
standards were set - 1977, 1990 Clean Air Act was updated (stricter
emission standards incentives to encourage
companies to lower emission standards) - Amendments to the Act identified 189 toxic air
pollutants
6Easterly winds blow smoke from many large fires
over a vast area of Southern Africa
7Sources of Air pollutants
- Air pollutants Airborne substances, either
solid, liquid, or gases, that occur in high conc.
Threatening the health of people, animals,
vegetation and structures - Natural Sources of pollutants Dust and soot from
earths surface (forest fires), volcanic eruption
releasing tons of ash and dust into the
atmosphere - Anthropogenic Pollutants
- Fixed sources Homes, office buildings,
industrial complexes, power plants, etc - Mobile sources Motor vehicles, ships, jet
aircraft, etc. - Primary Pollutants Enter atmosphere directly
(from smokestacks and tail pipes) - Secondary Pollutants Formed when a chemical
reaction occurs between a primary pollutant and
some other component of air, such as water vapor
or another pollutant
8Some of the sources of Primary pollutants
Sources Pollutants
Natural Volcanic eruptions Forest fires Dust storm Ocean waves Vegetation Hot springs Particle (dust, ash), gases (SO2, CO2) Smoke, unburned hydrocarbons (CO2, NOx, ash) Suspended particulate matter Salt particles Hydrocarbons (VOCs), pollen Sulfurous gases
Human caused Industrial Personal Paper mills Power Plants coal oil Refineries Manufacturing-H2SO4 PO4 fertilizer Iron steel mills Automobiles, fireplaces, home furnaces, Particulate matter, sulfur oxides Ash, sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides Sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides, CO Hydrocarbons, sulfur oxides, CO SO2, SO3 and H2SO4 Particulate matter, gaseous fluoride Gaseous resin CO, NOx, VOCs, particulate matter
9 of the primary pollutants in US
10Primary sources of air pollutants in US
11Denver (CO) on a clear day
12Denver (CO) on a day when particulate matter and
other pollutants reduce the visibility
13Aerosols suspended particulate matter
- Aerosols A group of solid particles and liquid
droplets that remain in suspension in the air
usually not poisonous more substances include
asbestos, fibers, arsenic, droplets of H2SO4,
PCBs, oil, pesticides - Some particulate matter containing Pb, Ni, Cu,
etc can affect respiratory system make breathing
difficult, particularly for those suffering from
chronic respiratory disorders - High accumulation of Pb in bones and soft tissues
can cause brain damage, convulsion, and death at
low concentrations, dangerous to fetuses, infants
and children when exposed may suffer central
nervous system damage - PM-10 Fine particulate matter lt 10 mm diameter
- gt 10 mm SPM settle in lt 1-day lt 1 mm remain in
air for several weeks
14Suspended particulate matter contd.
- Total SPM emitted over US 6.6 million tons 40
emitted from industrial processes highway
vehicles 17 - Arctic Haze Sooty particles formed over the
arctic during late winter and early spring - These find SPM serves as nuclei for cloud
droplets ice crystals when the particles are
in 0.1-1.0 mm size, haze particles effectively
scatter incoming sunlight - CO A major pollutant of city air odorless,
poisonous gas formed during the incomplete
combustion of carbon containing fuels most
abundant primary pollutant - Over 60 million metric tons/yr of CO enter the
air in US CO levels have decreased by 40 since
early 1970s - CO is quickly removed from the atmosphere by
microorganisms in the soil human hemoglobin
prefers CO to oxygen, so if CO is present, brain
will starve of oxygen leading to headache,
fatigue, drowsiness, and even death may result
15SO2 VOCs
- Sulfur dioxide sources burning of sulfur
containing fossil fuels (coal oil) primary
source includes power plants, heating devices,
smelters, petroleum refineries paper mills
volcanic eruptions and sulfate particles from
ocean spray other major sources - Inhalation of high concentrations aggravate
respiratory problems, such as asthma, bronchitis
emphysema - VOCs Organic compounds that are mainly
hydrocarbons individual organic compounds
composed of hydrogen and carbon occur as solids,
liquids and gases at room temperature - Methane is the most abundant Other VOCs include
benzene, formaldehyde some chlorofluorocarbons
16VOCs NOX
- 18 million metric tons of VOCS emitted into the
air in US 34 from vehicles used for
transportation 50 from industrial processes - Certain VOCs are carcinogens (cancer-causing
agents) benzene, benzo-a-pyrene (a product of
burning wood, tobacco barbecuing) - Many VOCs are harmless, but combining with
nitrogen oxides in the presence of sunlight to
produce secondary pollutants that are harmful to
human health - NOX Oxides of Nitrogen, primarily Nitrogen oxide
(NO2) and Nitric Oxide (NO) forms when some of
the nitrogen in the air reacts with oxygen during
the high-temperature combustion of fuel
17NOX Ozone
- NOx are produced by natural bacteria
concentration in urban area is 10-100 times
greater than nonurban areas - In moist air, nitrogen dioxide reacts with water
vapor to form nitric acid --- acid rain - Sources of NOx motor vehicles, power plants, and
waste disposal systems - Problems Contribute to heart lung problems,
lowering bodys resistance to respiratory
infections may encourage the spread of cancer
NOx are highly reactive gases plays a key role
in producing O3 in the air - Ozone (O3) Noxious substance with unpleasant
odor - Smog means smoke fog used to refer smog that
forms in large cities (e.g., LA)
18Smog
- Photo-chemical smog (or LA smog) Smog formed by
the chemical reactions in the presence of
sunlight - London-type smog When smog is composed of
sufurous and foggy air - Ozone forms naturally in the stratosphere through
the combination of molecular oxygen and atomic
oxygen stratospheric ozone provides a protective
shield against suns harmful UV rays - Tropospheric ozone Near the surface, in polluted
air, ozone is formed from a complex series of
chemical reactions (with sunlight) involving
pollutants, such as NOx and VOCs normally higher
during the afternoons and during the summer months
19Ozone
- Problems with ozone Irritates eyes mucous
membranes of the respiratory system, aggravating
chronic diseases, such as asthma and bronchitis
exposure to low concentrations for 6-7 hrs during
periods of moderate exercise can significantly
reduce lung function other symptoms include
chest pain, nausea, coughing, and pulmonary
congestion - Ozone Production Sunlight (lt 410 nm) breaks down
NO2 into NO and atomic oxygen - NO2 Solar Radiation -------- NO O
- O2 O M -------- O3 M (M third molecule)
- Ozone is destroyed by combining with nitric oxide
- O3 NO ----------- NO2 O2
20Average (2-yrs, 6 cities) hourly concentrations
of Ozone
21Ozone contd.
- Certain VOCs in polluted air allow ozone conc. to
increase by preventing nitric oxide from
destroying the ozone as rapidly as it forms - VOCs react with oxygen and nitrogen dioxide to
produce other desirable contaminants (such as
peroxy-acetyl nitrate)--- harmful to vegetation
irritates eyes - Ozone production should decrease in most areas
when emissions of NOx and VOCs are reduced - Ozone is most dense at 25 km from earth surface
at this altitude, 12 ozone molecules/million air
molecules (12 ppm) - UV radiation lt 300 nm has enough energy to cause
cancer - Decrease of ozone in the upper atmosphere leads
to the following a) Increase in the number of
cases of skin cancer eye cataracts and sun
burning b) suppression of human immune system
c) decrease in the ocean productivity d)
cooling of the stratosphere changes in
stratospheric wind pattern
22Average distribution of ozone above the earths
surface in the middle latitude
23Ozone - contd
- Nitrous oxide from fertilizers
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) - drifting to the
atmosphere through the breaks in the tropopause
in the vicinity of jet streams during
thunderstorms penetrating into the lower
stratosphere - One single chlorine atom released from CFCs
removes as many as 100,000 ozone molecules before
it is removed by combining with other substances - Average lifetime of a CFC molecule 50-100 yrs
- After 1987 Montreal Protocol, 1 decrease in the
total concentrations of ozone destroying chlorine
bromine compounds - gt5 billion kg of CFCs have been released into the
troposphere - Ozone layer thinned by 3 during the summer from
1979-1991 over heavily populated areas of the
Northern Hemisphere
24Ozone molecule adsorbing UV radiation
dissociates into molecular and atomic oxygen
25Ozone contd.
- Ozone levels dropped to record low levels over
much of the globe mainly due to
ozone-destroying chemicals and from the 1991
Mt.Pinatubo volcanic eruption (tons of sulfur
dioxide gas into the atmosphere, formation of
H2SO4) - Ozone Hole Sharp drop in the stratrospheric
ozone level observed over the Antarctic during
the spring - Clean Air Act of 1970 Since then, most of the
pollutant levels have fallen off substantially
many amendments thereafter 198 million autos on
the road in a day - Primary ambient air quality standards are set to
protect human health and secondary standards to
protect human welfare - Nonattainment Areas Areas that do not meet air
quality standards (80 million Americans are
breathing air that does not meet at least one of
the standards)
26Emission estimates of six pollutants in the US
from 1940-1995
27Pollutant Standard Index
- Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) Measure of air
quality in a particular region the highest value
in one day is used pollutant (CO, SO2, NO2, O3,
SPM) measurement is converted to a number that
ranges from 0 to 500 - Pollutant value primary ambient air quality
standard, then, the pollutant is assigned PSI
number 100 gt100 unhealthful 50-100 moderate
lt 50 Good - Total emissions of toxic chemicals spewed out
into the skies over US declined steadily since
EPA began the inventory of chemicals
28Number of unhealthful days (by county) when PSI
gt100 (any of CO, SO2, NO2, O3 SPM)
29Factors that affect air pollution
- Role of wind in diluting the pollutants
- Most pollution occurs when the winds are light,
skies are clear, mixing is shallow, atmosphere is
stable and a strong inversion exists - Urban areas are more polluted than the rural
areas - Urban areas tend to be warmer than urban areas
- Acid rain is a major problem
- Stability of atmosphere is determined by the way
air temperature changes with height
30Smoke from the shorter stack is trapped within
the inversion while smoke from taller stack,
above inversion, rises and mixes
31Stability and Inversions
- An inversion (temp decreases slowly as we ascend
or increases with height) represents extremely
stable atmosphere where warm air lies over the
cold air lid on the vertical motion - Pollutants from a shorter stack does not rise
very high, but spreads out, contaminating the
area while longer stacks release and the
pollutants get mixed well and travel farther
distances (dilution is the solution to the
pollution!)
32As vertical temp profile changes, the pattern of
emitted smoke also changes
33Inversion layer preventing the escape of
pollutants
34Thick layer of polluted air trapped in the valley
35Cold air pollutants drain downhill and settle in
the low-lying area
36A weak country breeze carries pollutants from the
outskirts into the city
37pH Scale
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41Chapter Summary
- Smoke in London, CA
- CO, NOx, SPM, how CO affect our body
- Volcano source of what contaminant
- VOC, photochemical smog
- Primary and secondary pollutants
- Acid rain, pH of rain water
- Mixing depth
- PSI-scale
- Aerosols, VOCs, carcinogens, ozone, sulfur
dioxide