Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Energy & Its Impact on Global Society Jerome K. Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University Dept. Mathematics & Sciences Chapter 8: Air Pollution & Energy Use • Properties & Motion of Atmosphere • Air Pollutants & Sources – Acid Rain – Photochemical Smog • Environmental Issues: Air-Quality Standards Properties & Motion of Atmosphere • Air is a mixture of gases (Table 8.1) • Majority of air is nitrogen (78%) and oxygen (21%) Properties & Motion of Atmosphere • Air pollutants are substances added by humans that are toxic or irritants to animals, vegetation, or property Properties & Motion of Atmosphere • Examples of Air pollutants • • • • • carbon monoxide (CO) carbon dioxide (CO2) sulfur dioxide (SO2) sulfur trioxide (SO3) heavy metals (lead, mercury, cadmium) iron carbon soot (ash) Properties & Motion of Atmosphere • Vertical motion of air and winds are important mechanisms for dispersing air pollutants • Temperature inversion occurs when warm air layer lies on top of cooler part; thus stopping atmospheric dispersion (mixing) of air pollutants Air Pollutants & Their Sources • Air Pollutants: Three Varieties – Gases – Particulates (small particles of solids) – Aerosols (small droplets liquid suspended in gas) – 135 million tons emitted into air over USA (this amounts to 1.3 kg/day/person) Air Pollutants & Their Sources • Air Pollutants: Sources – Stationary (Power Plants, Industries) – Moving Sources (Vehicles) – Natural Sources (Volcanoes, Biological Decay, Forest Fires, Ocean Spray) – Pollutant levels measured in parts per million (ppM) unit Air Pollutants & Their Sources • Carbon monoxide (CO) – Odorless, colorless, poisonous gas – Produced primarily in vehicle engines by the incomplete combustion of carbon found in gasoline fuel – Binds to hemoglobin in blood; prevents oxygen from reaching cells in body Air Pollutants & Their Sources • Sulfur oxides (SO2 & SO3) – Colorless gas; suffocating odor; powerful irritant – Comes from burning of coal (6% sulfur by weight) – Sulfur reacts with oxygen to form SO2 and continues to form SO3 – Oxides combine with water vapor to produce acid rain which falls back to Earth Air Pollutants & Their Sources Acid Rain Video • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nc6j7zz1_ do Air Pollutants & Their Sources • Nitrogen oxides (NO, NO2) – Origin: fossil fuel burning in vehicles and power plants – Photochemical Smog (observe brown haze due to NO2) – Also plays a role in acid rain phenomenon – Ozone plays a role in process Photochemical Smog Video • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8BPFyQ2CSU Air Pollutants & Their Sources • Indoor Air Pollution – Indoor air pollution concentrations can be many times greater than outside levels – 80% of time spent indoors (home & work or school) – Table 8.4 Environmental Issues: Air-Quality Standards • Clean Air Act (1970) – NAAQS (National Ambient Air Quality Standards) was established to reduce levels of six pollutants linked to human health effects – Sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides, particulates, ozone, carbon monoxide and lead Environmental Issues: Air-Quality Standards • Mini-Paper: Clean Air Act (Pollutant Levels) – Each student assigned one air pollutant – Determine air pollutant concentration that is acceptable today in US; compare to level in 1970s – How does one reduce the aforementioned pollutant while preserving a favorable benefit to cost ratio? – Essay is 600 – 800 words; due November 10 Problems • 10, 20, 23