chapter 18

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Options: washing away air pollution with artificial rain ?sucking it up with giant vacuum cleaners ? Shanghai has given its cops nose insert mini-filters A study published in the British medical journal the Lancet attributed 1.2 million premature deaths in 2010 to bad air A possible solution to China's smog: Giant vacuum cleaners

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Page 1: Chapter 18

Options: washing away air pollution with artificial rain ?sucking it up with giant vacuum cleaners ?Shanghai has given its cops nose insert mini-filtersA study published in the British medical journal the Lancet attributed 1.2 million premature deaths in 2010 to bad air

A possible solution to China's smog:

Giant vacuum cleaners

Page 2: Chapter 18

Chapter 18air pollution

Types and behaviorUS pollution DistributionCarbon cycle and weatherOzone & acid rain casesSolutions

Page 3: Chapter 18

Types of Air PollutionGaseous pollutants

CO and CO2

SO2

NO, NO2 [NOx ]O3 and CFCs –[chlorofluorocarbons]

ParticulatesSoot, ash, & smokeDust (released from industrial processes)Not a minor component - from 35 million tons/year (mainly

combustion) to 180 million tons/year (mostly industrial)Residence times vary widely, from a few years to millions of years – related to amount in the atmosphere, so N & O hang around longest

Page 4: Chapter 18

Major Emissions

CO – carbon monoxide – vehicles, combustionNot abundant but deadlyVery short residence time – fluctuating concentration

SO2 - sulfur dioxide – from combustion of coalforms acid rain – pH << 6very short residence time (days or hours)Mostly decreasing at least in US

NOx – nitrogen oxides – “smog ozone” interacts at several levels

reacts in sunlight to form opaque NO2, + ozone (O3), acids, etcEmissions steadily increasing

VOC – volatile organic compounds – breakdown products of industrial process, plastics, petroleum, etc

CO2 - carbon dioxide - combustion, and natural like respiration, volcanic eruptionsVarying residence time and fluxesRapidly, steadily increasing

Page 5: Chapter 18

US air pollution$16 billion annual U.S. expense (direct costs) vs $40B globally

Major gas sources:Transportation: [1] CO,

[1] NOx, [1] VOC, [1] CO2

Energy: [1] SO2, CO2,NOx

Industry: VOC, SO2, CO2 Transportation ranks first

in several categories

Particulates are heavily influenced by industry, greatly reduced in recent years

Page 6: Chapter 18

US gas emissionsComparing two classes shows

complex, interesting history

Sulfur

Nitrogen

Page 7: Chapter 18

The global carbon cycleComprised of sources and

sinksCO2 and CO are emitted

and travel through this cycle

Combustion and other emissions greatly alter the proportions

Major effects: greenhouse gases, plant building, hydrocarbon formation

These gases interact with lithosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere in often complex chemistry

Other compounds have similar cycles, sources and sinks

Page 8: Chapter 18

Air Pollution and WeatherThermal InversionWarm, polluted air tends to rise, cooling as

it goes a cool air mass can have an overlying air

mass trap the rising warm pollutant-bearing air mass; this condition is made worse by an air mass with stagnant conditions

Topography, climate may amplify the problem

Pollutants are concentrated in the lower air mass and trapped, yuk!

Page 9: Chapter 18

OzoneOzone (O3) is a ‘chemically out of place

pollutant’ – good high up, bad low downIn upper atmosphere the ozone layer absorbs

harmful ultraviolet radiationChlorine and fluorine are chemically active

ions that rip O3 apart & reduce O3 concentrations

Recently, banning CFCs has returned ozone to upper atmosphere

Page 10: Chapter 18

Acid RainAn acid solution has more Hydrogen-ions (H+) – measured in pH

Several common gases combine with water and air to make acids

Acid rain is harmful to plants,

health of rivers and lakes,

and animals – also causes

increases in the build up of

heavy metals (lead, zinc,

selenium, copper, and

aluminum) leached from

rocks and soils

Page 11: Chapter 18

Chinese Smog Created By Our

Demand for Cheap Goods Comes to L.A.

Global solutions

Page 12: Chapter 18

Air Pollution regulation

strong legislation that created the EPA - Environmental Protection Agency

Regulations cover catalytic converters and high fuel economy standard for new cars

Air Quality Standards – Clean Air Act (1970)

Result: dramatic reduction in emissions, especially the most harmful categories

Page 13: Chapter 18

The end

Thanks for taking a look at the Environmental Geology slides!