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Air Pollution

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Title: Air Pollution


1
Air Pollution
2
Outline
  • Natural Sources
  • Human-Caused Air Pollution
  • Conventional Pollutants
  • Unconventional Pollutants
  • Indoor Air Pollution
  • Climate and Topography
  • Effects of Air Pollution
  • Air Pollution Control
  • Clean Air Legislation
  • Current Conditions and Future Prospects

3
THE AIR AROUND US
  • Approximately 147 million metric tons of air
    pollution are released annually into the
    atmosphere in the U.S. by human activities.
  • Worldwide emissions total around 2 billion metric
    tons.
  • Developed countries have been improving air
    quality, while air quality in developing world is
    getting worse.

4
NATURAL SOURCES OF AIR POLLUTION
  • Natural Fires - Smoke
  • Volcanoes - Ash and acidic components
  • Sea Spray - Sulfur
  • Vegetation - Volatile organic compounds
  • Bacterial Metabolism - Methane
  • Dust
  • Pollen
  • Viruses and Bacteria

5
HUMAN-CAUSED AIR POLLUTION
  • Primary Pollutants - Released directly from the
    source.
  • Aerosols, soot, smoke, CO
  • Secondary Pollutants - Modified to a hazardous
    form after entering the air and mixing with other
    environmental components.
  • NO2 and SO2 mix with H2O to form nitric acid and
    sulfuric acid
  • Fugitive Emissions - Do not go through
    smokestack.
  • Dust from human-activities.

6
Conventional Pollutants
  • U.S. Clean Air Act designated seven major
    (conventional or criteria) pollutants for which
    maximum ambient air levels are mandated.
  • Sulfur Dioxide
  • Nitrogen Oxides
  • Carbon Oxides
  • Particulate Matter
  • Metals and Halogens
  • Volatile Organic Compounds

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Conventional Pollutants
  • Sulfur Compounds
  • Natural sources of sulfur in the atmosphere
    include evaporation from sea spray, volcanic
    fumes, and organic compounds.
  • Predominant form of anthropogenic (anthro
    human, genic creation) sulfur is sulfur-dioxide
    from fossil-fuel combustion.
  • Annual Emissions 114 million metric tons

9
Conventional Pollutants
  • Nitrogen Compounds
  • Nitrogen oxides are reactive gases formed when
    nitrogen is heated above 650o C in the presence
    of oxygen, or when nitrogen compounds are
    oxidized.
  • Annual Emissions 230 million metric tons

10
Conventional Pollutants
  • Carbon Oxides
  • Predominant form of carbon in the air is carbon
    dioxide.
  • Increasing levels due to human activities.
  • Annual Emissions 7-8 billion metric tons
  • Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless, toxic
    gas produced by incomplete fuel combustion.
  • Annual Emissions 1 billion metric tons

11
Conventional Pollutants
  • Particulate Matter
  • Atmospheric aerosols (solid or liquid)
  • Respirable particles smaller than 2.5 micrometers
    are among most dangerous.
  • Anthropogenic particulate emissions amount to
    about 362 million metric tons annually.

12
Conventional Pollutants
  • Metals
  • Many toxic metals occur as trace elements in
    fuel.
  • Lead Emissions 2 million metric tons.
  • Mercury
  • Bioaccumulation in aquatic ecosystems.
  • Nickel, beryllium, cadmium, arsenic
  • Halogens (Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine)
  • CFCs

13
Conventional Pollutants
  • Volatile Organic Compounds
  • Organic chemicals
  • Generally oxidized to CO and CO2.
  • Plants are largest source.
  • Photochemical Oxidants
  • Products of secondary atmospheric reactions
    driven by solar energy.
  • Ozone formed by splitting nitrogen dioxide.

14
Air Toxins
  • Hazardous Air Pollutants
  • Require special reporting and management as they
    remain in ecosystems for a long period of time,
    and tend to accumulate in animal tissues.
  • Toxic Release Inventory
  • Established 1986

15
Unconventional Pollutants
  • Aesthetic Degradation
  • Noise, odor, light pollution.
  • Reduce quality of life.

16
Indoor Air Pollution
  • EPA found indoor concentrations of toxic air
    pollutants are often higher than outdoor.
  • People generally spend more time indoors.
  • Smoking is the most important air pollutant in
    the U.S..
  • 400,000 die annually from a disease related to
    smoking.
  • Associated costs are estimated at 100 billion
    annually.

17
Indoor Air Pollution
  • Less Developed Countries also suffer from indoor
    air pollution.
  • Organic fuels make up majority of household
    energy.
  • Often burned in smoky, poorly ventilated heating
    and cooking fires.

18
Smog!
  • Two types
  • Grey smog (aerosols from smoke, sulfur dioxide,
    sulfuric acid droplets)
  • Photochemical smog (brown smog) sunlight reacts
    with secondary pollutants creating a more toxic
    smog Polyaromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH)

19
Conditions conducive to smog
  • Sunny, dry conditions
  • Topography
  • Population size
  • Form of energy used
  • Size of buildings
  • Amount of precipitation
  • Amount of industry and pollution controls

20
CLIMATE AND TOPOGRAPHY
  • Inversions
  • Temperature inversions occur when a stable layer
    of warm air overlays cooler air, reversing the
    normal temperature decline with increasing
    height, and preventing convection currents from
    dispersing pollutants.
  • Cold front slides under warm air mass.
  • Cool air subsides down slope.
  • Rapid nighttime cooling in a basin.

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22
Dust Domes and Heat Islands
  • Sparse vegetation and large amounts of concrete
    and glass create warm, stable air masses, heat
    islands, over large cities.
  • Concentrates pollutants in a dust dome.
  • Rural areas downwind from major industrial areas
    often have significantly decreased visibility and
    increased rainfall.

23
Long-Range Transport or Transboundary Pollution
  • Fine aerosols can be carried great distances by
    the wind.
  • Increasingly, sensitive monitoring equipment has
    begun to reveal industrial contaminants in places
    usually considered among the cleanest in the
    world.
  • Contaminants trapped by winds at the north pole,
    concentrate at high latitudes and eventually fall
    out as snow and ice and enter the food chain.

24
Long-Range Transport
25
Pollution and Progress
  • Dark or medium green highly developed
  • Pea green developing
  • Other colors - underdeveloped

26
Ways to Combat Pollution in Developing and
Underdeveloped Countries
  • Give them the advanced technology in exchange for
  • Carbon cap and trade allowances
  • Exchange of goods or resources/purchasing from
    developed countries

27
Stratospheric Ozone
  • Discovered in 1985 that stratospheric ozone
    levels were dropping rapidly during September and
    October.
  • Occurring since at least 1960.
  • At ground-level, ozone is a pollutant, but in the
    stratosphere it screens UV radiation.
  • A 1 decrease in ozone results in a 2 increase
    in UV rays reaching the earth.

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29
Stratospheric Ozone
  • Circumpolar vortex isolates Antarctic air and
    allows stratospheric temperatures to drop and
    create ice crystals at high altitudes.
  • Absorb ozone and chlorine molecules.
  • When sun returns in the spring, energy liberates
    the chlorine allowing the depletion process to
    proceed rapidly.
  • CFCs believed to be main culprit.
  • Persist for decades.
  • Production eliminated in 1996.

30
CFCs or Chlorofluorcarbons
  • Propellants added to spray cans to help move the
    wanted chemical out
  • Found in ALL spray cans up until 1986

31
Destruction of Stratospheric Ozone
http//www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/environment/ozone
_hole101.html
32
Ground Level Ozone
  • How ozone is formed http//airnow.gov/index.cfm?ac
    tionmovie.main

33
Air Pollution Trends, 1990-2000
  • Rising levels of pollution
  • Lack of laws to curb emissions

34
EFFECTS OF AIR POLLUTION
  • Human Health
  • EPA estimates each year 50,000 U.S. citizens die
    prematurely from illnesses related to air
    pollution.
  • Likelihood of suffering ill health is related to
    intensity and duration of exposure.
  • Inhalation is the most common route, but
    absorption through the skin and consumption via
    food can also occur.

35
Global Distribution of Deaths from Air Pollution
36
Human Health
  • Bronchitis
  • Persistent inflammation of airways in the lung
    that causes mucus build-up and muscle spasms
    constricting airways.
  • Can lead to emphysema - irreversible chronic
    obstructive lung disease in which airways become
    permanently constricted and alveoli are damaged
    or destroyed.
  • http//airnow.gov/index.cfm?actionmovie.main Air
    Aware video

37
Human Health
  • Asthma
  • Chronic condition where trachea and bronchioles
    swell, reducing air volume to lungs
  • Highest rates seen among inner city minorities
    due to home location near industry (industrial
    racism)

38
Plant Pathology
  • Chemical pollutants can directly damage plants,
    or can cause indirect damage by disrupting normal
    growth and development patterns.
  • Certain environmental factors have synergistic
    effects in which the injury caused by the
    combination is more than the sum of the
    individual exposures.
  • Pollutant levels too low to cause visible effects
    may still be damaging.

Synegy simultaneous joint action of separate
substances/factions/factors which, together, have
greater total effect than the sum of their
individual effects.
39
Acid Deposition
  • pH and Atmospheric Acidity
  • pH scale ranges from 0-14.
  • 7 Neutral lt7 Acidic gt7 Basic
  • Unpolluted rain generally has ph of 5.6.
  • Carbonic acid from atmospheric CO2.
  • In industrialized areas, anthropogenic acids in
    the air often outweigh natural sources of acid.

40
Acid Precipitation
41
Acid Deposition
  • Aquatic Effects
  • Thin, acidic soils and oligotrophic lakes of
    southern Norway and Sweden have been severely
    affected by acid deposition.
  • Generally, reproduction is the most sensitive
    stage in fish life cycles.
  • In early 1970s, evidence began to accumulate
    suggesting air pollutants are acidifying many
    N.A. lakes.

lakes are clear and blue, with very low levels
of nutrients and algae
42
Acid Deposition
  • Forest Damage
  • Air pollution and depositions of atmospheric
    acids are believed to be important causes of
    forest destruction in many areas.
  • Buildings and Monuments
  • Limestone and marble are destroyed by air
    pollution at an alarming rate.
  • Corroding steel in reinforced concrete weakens
    buildings, roads, and bridges.

43
AIR POLLUTION CONTROL
  • Reducing Production
  • Particulate Removal
  • Remove particles physically by trapping them in a
    porous mesh which allows air to pass through but
    holds back solids.
  • Electrostatic Precipitators - Fly ash particles
    pick up electrostatic charge as they pass between
    large electrodes in waste stream, and accumulate
    on collecting plate.

44
AIR POLLUTION CONTROL
  • Reducing Production
  • Particulate Removal
  • Remove particles physically by trapping them in a
    porous mesh which allows air to pass through but
    holds back solids.
  • Sulfur Removal
  • Switch from soft coal with a high sulfur content
    to low sulfur coal.
  • Change to another fuel (natural gas).

45
Air Pollution Control
  • Nitrogen Oxides
  • Best method is to prevent creation.
  • Staged Burners
  • Selective Catalysts
  • Hydrocarbon Control
  • Use closed systems to prevent escape of fugitive
    emissions.

46
Scrubbers
Sulfur scrubbers remove sulfuric acid and sulfur
compounds from smoke
Wet scrubbers spray the dirty air to remove
particles from the bottom
Dry scrubber rods electronically attract dry
aerosols
47
Modern Automobile Emission-Control System
48
CLEAN AIR LEGISLATION
  • Clean Air Act (1963) - First national air
    pollution control.
  • Clean Air Act (1970) rewrote original.
  • Identified critical pollutants.
  • Established ambient air quality standards.
  • Primary Standards - Human health
  • Secondary Standards - Materials, environment,
    aesthetic and comfort.

49
Clean Air Act
  • Revision (1990) - Included provision for
  • Acid Rain
  • Urban Smog
  • Toxic Air Pollutants
  • Ozone Protection
  • Marketing Pollution Rights
  • Volatile Organic Compounds
  • Ambient Ozone
  • Nox Emissions
  • Revision (1997) - Stricter standards
  • Latest revision (2007) ruling by Supreme Court
    mandates inclusion of carbon dioxide in CAA

50
CURRENT CONDITIONS AND FUTURE PROSPECTS
  • In the United States, air quality has improved
    dramatically in the last decade in terms of major
    large-volume pollutants.
  • Cities where pollution is largely from traffic
    still have serious air quality problems.
  • Major metropolitan areas of many developing
    countries are growing at explosive rates, and
    environmental quality is very poor.

51
Air Pollution in Developing Countries
  • Many metropolitan areas of developing countries
    are growing at explosive rates.
  • Mexico City
  • Pollution levels exceed WHO health standards 350
    days per year.
  • Chinas 400,000 factories have no air pollution
    controls.
  • Bangkok, Thailand reduced their air pollution by
    combining sensible regulations like tailpipe
    emissions standards, simple fixes like street
    washing, and a substantial mass-transit
    expansion have air standards similar to European
    standards

52
Signs of Hope
  • Sweden and West Germany cut their sulfur emission
    by two-thirds between 1970 and 1985.
  • Australia and Switzerland even regulate
    motorcycle emissions.
  • South Coast Air Quality Management District in
    California has adopted rules to clean the air in
    the Los Angeles Basin.

53
Summary
  • Natural Sources
  • Human-Caused Air Pollution
  • Conventional Pollutants
  • Unconventional Pollutants
  • Indoor Air Pollution
  • Climate and Topography
  • Effects of Air Pollution
  • Air Pollution Control
  • Clean Air Legislation
  • Current Conditions and Future Prospects

54
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