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Air Pollution

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Air Pollution. Lecture 2. Key Concepts. Source. Place where pollutants emanate ... Sources of Air Pollution. Natural vs Anthropogenic Sources. Volcanic ash ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Air Pollution


1
Air Pollution
  • Lecture 2

2
Key Concepts
  • Source
  • Place where pollutants emanate
  • Natural and anthropogenic
  • Plant and animal decay, volcanoes, forest fires
  • Sinks
  • Place where pollutants disappear from the air
  • Soil, vegetation, structures, water bodies,
  • Scavenging Mechanisms
  • Mechanisms by which pollution is removed from the
    atmosphere (e.g. rain)
  • Oxidationturns pollutants (NO, NO2, SO2) etc
    into acids, which then react with particulate
    matter to form salts

3
Key Concepts
  • Half-life
  • Measure used for aging a pollutant
  • Time it takes for ½ of a pollutant emanating from
    a source to disappear into one of its sinks
  • Most pollutants have a short half-life (days
    rather than decades)
  • Prevents accumulation
  • Not all CO2
  • Has been accumulating in the ATM
  • Also Nitrous Oxide (NO2), Methane, CFCs

4
CO2 Concentrations
5
Key Concepts
  • Receptor
  • Something adversely affected by polluted air
  • Person or animal
  • Tree or plant
  • Material Paper, leather, cloth
  • Aquatic life
  • Some soils

6
Key Concepts
  • Transport
  • The mechanism that moves the pollution from the
    source to the receptor
  • Smoke stack and a person downstream
  • The wind is the mechanism that moves the
    pollution
  • Some pollutants can get above the lower
    atmospheric turbulence and travel hundreds or
    thousands of miles
  • California Fires

7
Diffusion
  • What happens to the smoke from the stack?
  • The plume changes shape
  • Turbulent eddies move some of the plume into the
    surrounding air and vice versa
  • If the wind speed ejection speed, the plume
    will get stretched
  • The plume will meander as the wind direction
    fluctuates

Mixing, stretching, and meandering act to weaken
the concentration of the pollutant--Diffusion
8
Averaging Time
  • Variability of concentration at a receptor
  • Inherent variability of diffusion and transport
  • Time variability of source strengths
  • Scavenging and conversion mechanisms in the ATM
  • All result in an effective half life of a
    contaminant
  • Not all measurements are created equal

9
Measurements
  • The averaging time is extremely important
  • Only works one wayFrom A B, C, and D can be
    reconstructed

CNT
15m
1hr
6hr
10
Why not only use Continuous Measurements?
  • Too much information
  • Samples turbulent nature of the atmosphere
  • Must be filtered to extract out the useful
    information about the signal
  • Time lags are built into the sampling, analysis,
    and/or recording of the data
  • Result is data averaged over 1min, 3min, 5min,
    60min, etc

11
Arrowhead Charts
  • Abscissa (x)Averaging time in 2 different units
  • Ordinate (y)Concentration of the pollutant at
    the receptor

12
Example-1h averaging time for 1 yr
  • 8760 data points
  • Array in decreasing value (1 max, 1 min)
  • The value 2628 from the max will be the value for
    which 30 are above and 70 are lower
  • The value 876 from the max will be the value for
    which 10 are above and 90 are lower
  • The 1 value is between the 87 and 88th values
    from the maximum
  • The .1 value is between the 8 and 9th values
    from the maximum

13
Example-1h averaging time for 1 yr
  • The 50 valuethe median value
  • Not necessarily the same as average

14
Arrowhead Chart Example
15
Composition of Clean, Dry Air at Sea Level
16
Sources of Air Pollution
  • Natural vs Anthropogenic Sources
  • Volcanic ash
  • Car Exhaust
  • What about sand?
  • What about sand under a layer of removed ground
    cover?

17
Natural Sources
  • Volcanic eruptions
  • Particulate matter, SO2, H2S
  • Harmful for great distances from the source
  • Mt St. Helens
  • (May 18, 1980)

18
Natural Sources
  • Forest and Brush Fires (Even if started by
    accident)
  • Smoke, unburned hydrocarbons, CO, CO2, oxides of
    nitrogen, and ash
  • Cause reduction in visibility and solar radiation
    350 km from fire

19
Source Unknown
20
Natural Sources
  • Dust Storms
  • Entrain large amounts of particulate matter
  • Particulate concentrations 1 to 2 orders of
    magnitude greater than ambient quantities
  • Cause severe highway accidents and disrupt air
    travel

21
Dust Storms
22
Natural Sources
  • The Ocean
  • AerosolsSalt particles
  • Sand and shell particles may become airborne
  • Plants and trees
  • Major source of HC on Earth
  • Reactions with volatile organic matter causes the
    Blue haze seen over forested regions
  • Salt water lakes, hot sulfur springs
  • Local effect

23
Blue Haze
Les Vosges in France
24
Anthropogenic SourcesIndustrial
  • Manufacturing products of raw materials
  • Iron from Ore
  • Lumber from trees
  • Gasoline from Crude oil
  • Stone from quarries
  • Industries that convert materials
  • Automobile bodies from steel
  • Furniture from lumber
  • Paint from solids and solvents
  • Asphalt paving from rock and oil

25
Industrial Sources
  • Stationary
  • Each emits stable quality and quantity pollutants
  • Generally controlled by applying technology

26
Anthropogenic SourcesUtilities
  • Utilitiesconvert energy from one form of the
    other
  • If a large steam generating plant produces 2000MW
    of power, burns a million kg/hr of 4 ash coal,
    it must somehow dispose of 40,000 kg of ash per
    hour
  • If 50 is removed in the furnace, and 50 goes up
    the stack in which there is a filtering system
    in place that is 99 effective, that still leaves
    200 kg of ash per hour emitted to the atmosphere

27
Typical Utility Plant
  • Gaseous emissions
  • 341,000 kg of oxides of sulfur PER DAY
  • 185,000 kg of oxides of nitrogen PER DAY
  • What if this is too much?
  • Purchase cleaner coal
  • Change the furnace so less ash makes it to the
    stack
  • Install more efficient post processing pollution
    control
  • This all costs moneyso energy costs go up!

28
Typical Power Plant
29
Utilities
  • Waste management
  • Poorly managed sewage treatment plant
  • Burning landfills (used to be commonplace)
  • Cheapest method of waste reduction

Burn at low temperatures Release large amounts of
Toxins Increase numbers of rats
30
Personal Sources
  • Automobiles (largest contributors)
  • Home Furnaces
  • Home Fireplaces and Stoves
  • Backyard barbeques
  • Open burning of refuse and leaves
  • Typical emission of pollutants from personal
    sources exceeds those from industrial sources and
    utilities combined!
  • 72 kg particulates, 1840 kg gases per year per US
    family of 4

31
Control of Personal Sources
  • Regulation
  • You may only BBQ when the atmosphere is mixing
    well
  • Change of lifestyle
  • How many people would trade in that car for the
    bus?
  • Change to a less polluting source
  • Coal? Natural gas
  • Change the type of pollution
  • Instead of burning leaves, take them to a
    landfill
  • Whatever the choice, some people are unhappy

32
Primary Pollutants
  • Directly emitted from sources
  • Carbon monoxide (CO)
  • odorless, colorless, poisonous gas
  • created by incomplete combustion (especially bad
    with older cars)
  • generates headaches, drowsiness, fatigue, can
    result in death
  • Oxides of nitrogen (NOx, NO)
  • NO - nitric oxide
  • emitted directly by autos, industry
  • Sulfur oxides (SOx)
  • SO2 - sulfur dioxide
  • produced largely through coal burning
  • responsible for acid rain problem
  • Volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
  • highly reactive organic compounds
  • release through incomplete combustion and
    industrial sources
  • Particulate matter (dust, ash, salt particles)
  • bad for your lungs

33
Primary Pollutants and their Sources
34
Secondary Pollutants
  • Form in the atmosphere through chemical and
    photochemical reactions from the primary
    pollutants
  • Sulfuric acid H2SO4
  • Can cause respiratory problems
  • nitrogen dioxide NO2
  • Gives air a brownish coloration
  • Ozone O3
  • Colorless gas
  • Has a sweet smell
  • Is an oxidizing agent - lung tissue to rubber
    products
  • Irritates the eyes

35
Pollutants
  • Precursors
  • Primary pollutants that react to form secondary
    pollutants
  • Most primary pollutants are precursors

Many pollutants exist in both forms
simultaneously
36
Types of PollutantsBased on Chemical Properties
  • Sulfur compounds
  • Major sources
  • Combustion of sulfur containing fossil fuels and
    organic matter (A)
  • Waste disposal (A)
  • Pulp and paper manufacturing (A)
  • Sea spray and Evaporation from oceans (N)
  • Biological decay (N)
  • Major ProblemSO2
  • Colorless corrosive gas with a pungent odor
  • Results in Sulfuric Acid (PP) and Sulfates (SP)
  • Acid rain

37
Ambient SO2 Concentrations
38
Nitrogen Compounds
  • Form oxides
  • N2ONitrous Oxide
  • Not considered a pollutant of significant concern
  • Almost no anthropogenic sources (Fertilized
    soils)
  • NO (Nitric Oxide) and NO2 (Nitrogen Dioxide)
    (NOx)
  • Take part in the photochemical reactions that
    produce O3
  • NO2 is a pungent, reddish brown irritating gas
  • Sources
  • High temperature combustion (A)
  • Biological growth and decay (N)
  • Lightning (N)
  • Volcanoes (N)

39
Nitrogen Oxides
40
Inorganic Carbon Compounds
  • Sources of CO and CO2
  • Incomplete and complete combustion of carbon
    containing fossil fuels (A) Incineration of
    biomass of solid waste (A) Decomposition of
    organic material (N) Respiratory processes of
    animals (N)
  • CO
  • Colorless, odorless, non-irritating highly toxic
    gas (Dangerous asphyxiant)
  • Motor vehicle emissions and fossil fuel burning
    (A)
  • DecreasingCatalytic converters and cleaner
    burning
  • Volcanoes, forest fires etc (N)
  • Most of the increasing atmospheric concentration
    of CO and CO2 increase in is attributed to
    anthropogenic sources
  • CO2 increasing at .5 per year

41
Carbon Dioxide
42
Organic Carbon Compounds(Hydrocarbons)
  • Sources
  • Volcanoes, fires, natural gas seepage, and
    biological processes (N)
  • Transportation, fossil fuel burning, chemical
    plants, petroleum refining, solid waste disposal
    (A)
  • Produce Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC)
  • Organic compounds that evaporate at room
    temperature
  • Methane (CH4)
  • Sources include Natural wetlands and rice
    paddies rotting of dead plants in swamps
    bacteria in the guts of termites and ruminant
    animals
  • Generally non-reactive poses threat as green
    house gas

43
Organic Carbon Compounds
  • Non methane hydrocarbons (NMHC)
  • Anthropogenic VOCs
  • Benzene, toluene, formaldehyde, vinyl chloride,
    phenols, chloroform
  • Naturally occurring VOCs
  • Released by trees
  • Isoprenereleased by deciduous trees (Oak, aspen)
  • Pinene and limonenereleased by coniferous trees
  • Play an important role in the photochemical
    reactions that produce smog and ozone
  • Tropospheric lifetimes of several months to hours

44
Ozone
  • Good Ozone
  • Highly reactive bluish gas naturally formed at
    high altitudes in the stratosphere
  • Absorbs UV radiation
  • Bad Ozone
  • Formed in the troposphere
  • Complex chemical reactions between nitrogen
    oxides and VOCs in the presence of sunlight
  • Acrid odor
  • Causes eye irritation, respiratory difficulties
  • One of the main ingredients of smog

45
Halogen Compounds
  • Biggest concerns are CFC and HCL
  • Ozone depletion and acid rain

46
Worldwide Annual Natural and Anthropogenic
Emission (106 tons)
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