The major air pollutants

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
Advertisements

Chapter 15 Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion.
Air and Air Pollution G. Tyler Miller’s Living in the Environment 13 th Edition Chapter 17 G. Tyler Miller’s Living in the Environment 13 th Edition Chapter.
Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
How Humans Affect the Atmosphere: Air Pollution and its Impacts Weather & Atmosphere – Meeting the Benchmarks CCISD, Hancock, MI Feb 15, 2002 Richard E.
What are the origins and environmental implications of pollutants in car exhaust gases? By Katie Dowler and Melissa WhiteBy Katie Dowler and Melissa White.
Air is an important natural resource.
AIR POLLUTION.
Air Pollution.
Air Pollution TSWBAT: Define air pollution.
Chapter 15 Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion.
What do you think this means?. Learning Targets 8. Identify the causes and effects of pollution on Earth’s cycles. 9. Explain how pollution affects.
Air Pollution Dr. R. B. Schultz. Introduction Air pollution Types Air pollution Types Sources of pollutants Sources of pollutants Pollution and weather.
Chapter 15 Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion.
Air Pollution. Overview of Air Pollution o Atmosphere as a Resource o Types and Sources of Air Pollution Major Classes of Air Pollutants Major Classes.
Aim: What are the major outdoor air pollutants?
Air Pollution By: Diana Moy.
AIR and Air Pollution Health Effects A. Short-term effects reversible 1. headache 2. nausea 3. irritation to eyes, nose, & throat 4. tightness in chest.
AIR and Air Pollution Atmosphere is made up of: 1. Nitrogen - 78% 2. Oxygen – 21% 3. Argon(.9%), carbon dioxide(.03%) and water vapor(.07%)
Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
What Causes Air Pollution /08. Air 78% Nitrogen 20 % Oxygen Carbon Dioxide, Argon and water vapor.
Urban Air Pollution Nada Nabulsi & Thea Tadros. Sources Particulate Matter: smoke, dirt and dust from factories, farming, and roads Ground Level Ozone.
Unit 9 Lesson 4 Human Impact on the Atmosphere
Air Pollution Definition: Chemical or physical agent that when added to the environment impacts people, wildlife, plants or ecosystems. Natural.
1 ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT The conversion of energy from one form to another often affects the environment and the air we breathe in many ways, and thus.
 Carbon Monoxide (CO)  Nitrogen Oxides (NOx)  Sulfur Oxides (SOx)  Industry  Transportation  Power.
Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
By: Arturo Alleje Degradation of the atmosphere’s life support sysytems.
A flammable greenhouse gas produced by ruminants, rice paddies and landfill decompostion. Methane.
AIR POLLUTION REVIEW 1.WHAT ARE THE TWO MAJOR AIR POLLUTANTS IN THE TRIAD?
Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion Chapter 15.
Chapter 20 Air Pollution. Atmosphere as a Resource o Atmospheric Composition Nitrogen 78.08% Nitrogen 78.08% Oxygen 20.95% Oxygen 20.95% Argon 0.93% Argon.
Air Pollution. Overview o Atmosphere o Types and Sources of Air Pollution Major Classes of Air Pollutants Major Classes of Air Pollutants Sources of Outdoor.
Earth’s Atmosphere. Relevance? Air we breathe Screens against meteor impact Absorbs UV radiation Bounces radio waves off the ionosphere.
Urban air pollution and Acid rain. Pollutants Primary – emitted directly exhaust fumes factory chimneys Oil spills Secondary – primary reacts with substances.
Air pollution. What is air pollution? Air pollution is the presence of substances in the air that are harmful to health or the environment. It can be.
Chapter 15 Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion.
Chapter 15 Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion.
2.2 Monitoring Air Quality and the Atmosphere GO C2Identify processes for Measuring the Quantity of Different Substances in the Environment and for Monitoring.
Unit 4 Lesson 3 Human Impact on the Atmosphere
Air Pollution.
Pollution and the Environment
Ch. 18 Air Pollution.
Transportation and the Environment
A list of the most common air pollutants – sources and effects
Air Pollution TSWBAT: Define air pollution.
Unit 4 Lesson 3 Human Impact on the Atmosphere
Air Pollution.
Chapter 20 Air Pollution.
Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
L1.06 Air Pollution Lesson Outcomes How I did Targets Task 1:
Air Resources & Pollution
Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
Impacts on the Atmosphere
Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
16.3 Categories of Air Pollutants
Human Impact on The Atmosphere
DO NOW Pick up notes and Review #31..
Impacts on the Atmosphere
All About the Air….
Mr. Ross Brown Brooklyn School for Law and Technology
Greenhouse effect.
Do We Impact the Atmosphere?
AIR QUALITY & AIR POLLUTION
Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
Air.
Air Pollution and Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
Human Impact on the Atmosphere
Major Air Pollutants.
Presentation transcript:

The major air pollutants Carbon monoxide (CO) Nitrogen oxides (NOx) Ozone (O3) Particulate matter (PM-10, PM-2.5) Sulfur dioxide (SO2) Lead (Pb) Greenhouse gases (CO2 and others)

Carbon Monoxide Impacts: Blood oxygen levels Headaches, alertness, death Sources: Vehicles (plus others) Source: Ref. (1)

Carbon Monoxide CO levels are improving, but still a problem in many colder urban areas. Source: Ref. (1)

Nitrogen Oxides Impacts: Respiratory irritant Leads to ozone formation Leads to acidic deposition of HNO3 Sources: High-temperature combustion Source: Ref. (1)

Ozone Impacts: Respiratory irritant Plant damage (forest, crops) Sources: Produced in the atmosphere

Ozone A major urban and regional pollution problem Source: Ref. (1)

Particulate Matter Definitions: PM10 = PM < 10 um Impacts: Lung irritation Visibility

Particulate Matter Impacts: Lung irritation Visibility Sources: Depends on particle size Source: Ref. (1)

Particulate Matter Impacts: Visibility at Shenandoah Nat’l Park Source: Ref. (2)

Sulfur Dioxide Impacts: Eye and lung irritation Acidic deposition of sulfuric acid. Damage to limestone and concrete. Sources: Source: Ref. (1)

Sulfur Dioxide Impacts: Acidic deposition of H2SO4. Pure water pH = 5.6 Source: Ref. (3)

Lead Impacts: Brain and kidney damage. Sources: Leaded gasoline was dominant, but Pb is no longer in U.S. on-road gasoline Source: Ref. (1)

Lead Impacts: Brain and kidney damage. Sources: Metals processing, battery mfr, etc Source: Ref. (1)

Greenhouse Gases Impacts: Global climate change Gases: Sources: See : Ref. (4)

What determines the average temperature of the earth? The Greenhouse Effect What determines the average temperature of the earth? 1. Source: Ref. (5)

What determines the average temperature of the earth? The Greenhouse Effect What determines the average temperature of the earth? 2.

What determines the average temperature of the earth? The Greenhouse Effect What determines the average temperature of the earth? 3.

The Natural Greenhouse Effect Average solar radiation in: 236 W per square m Without the atmosphere, temperature would be: -2 F Greenhouse effect of natural water and CO2: 148 W per square m (1 lightbulb every 2 feet) Result: Average temperature = 57 F

The Human Contribution Source: Ref. (6)

The Human Contribution Total effect until now: about 2.3 W / m2 (1 light bulb every 15 feet) Predicted effect by 2050: Up to 7 W / m2 (1 light bulb every 9 feet)

Expected Impacts: More precip, more energy in weather More extreme weather events are predicted On average, more precipitation, but region-by-region, some will be wetter, some drier.

CO2 Emissions by Nation Developing nations will soon be the largest CO2 producers, but most CO2 in the atmosphere today came from to industrialized nations Source: Ref. (8)

Particulate Activities Light scattering Particles most effectively scatter light. Uncontrolled car exhaust scatters blue light. Atmospheric gases also scatter, blue more than red. Large concentrations of particle mixtures scatter all colors  white haze

Haze in Los Angeles Source: Ref. (9)

Local Issues Vehicle emissions Sources of CO, CO2, particulates, NOx, VOCs Strategies for reducing emissions Fuel economy (all, proportional to fuel use) Catalytic converters and no exhaust system leaks (CO, NOx, particulates, VOCs – no effect on CO2)

Local Issues 2. Snowmobiles and wood stoves Snowmobiles: 2-cycle engines are light, but of the C burned, ~1/3 is fully burned and emitted as CO2. ~1/3 is emitted as CO. ~1/3 is not burned at all and released as gasoline.

Local Issues 2. Snowmobiles and wood stoves Wood stoves: Newer wood stoves have catalysts or secondary combustion; those without emit more particles and VOCs Can compare by viewing chimney exhaust (don’t be fooled by water fog) Wood stoves can be a major source of indoor air pollution when smoke is pulled in from outdoors.

Local Issues 3. Indoor air pollution Key issues: Radon Molds Particles and smokes

PCBs “PolyChlorinatedBiphenyls” Used in transformers, as hydraulic fluids, … Chemically stable, thermally stable, high dielectric constants. Not broken down in the environment. Accumulate in animal fats. Cause birth defects. Manufacture in U.S. banned in 1977.

Stratospheric Ozone Antarctic ozone hole Source: Ref (13)

Stratospheric Ozone Declining outside of Antarctica Source: Ref (5)

Stratospheric Ozone Impact on UV radiation Source: Ref (5)

Stratospheric Ozone Success of the Montreal Protocol Source: Ref (18)

Stratospheric Ozone Some common questions CFCs are heavier than air, so cannot reach the stratosphere. The ozone hole is natural, and is caused by volcanoes and oceans. Ozone depletion occurs only over Antarctica.

Roles of Ozone in the Lower Atmosphere Human health effects (urban and rural). Causes forest and crop damage (regional).

Ozone is an issue in urban areas and in large regions Source: Ref (17)