Chapter 13: Air Pollution - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 21
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 13: Air Pollution

Description:

One way concerns the influence that weather conditions have on the dilution and ... of air pollution are recent creations, others, such as London's infamous smoke ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:134
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 22
Provided by: drr110
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 13: Air Pollution


1
Chapter 13 Air Pollution
  • Dr. R. B. Schultz
  • Geography 101 Weather and Climate

2
Air Pollution and Weather
  • Air pollution and weather are linked in two ways.
    One way concerns the influence that weather
    conditions have on the dilution and dispersal of
    air pollutants.
  • The second way is the reverse and deals with the
    effect that air pollution has on weather and
    climate.
  • Air is never perfectly clean.
  • Examples of natural air pollution include
  • Ash,
  • salt particles,
  • pollen and spores,
  • smoke and
  • windblown dust

3
Air Pollutant Types
  • Although some types of air pollution are recent
    creations, others, such as London's infamous
    smoke pollution, have been around for centuries.
    One of the most tragic air pollution episodes
    ever occurred in London in December 1952 when
    more than four- thousand people died.
  • Air pollutants are airborne particles and gasses
    that occur in concentrations that endanger the
    heath and well-being of organisms or disrupt the
    orderly functioning of the environment.
  • Pollutants can be grouped into two categories
  • (1) primary pollutants, which are emitted
    directly from identifiable sources, and
  • (2) secondary pollutants, which are produced in
    the atmosphere when certain chemical reactions
    take place among primary pollutants.

4
Primary Pollutants
  • The major primary pollutants include
  • particulate matter (PM),
  • sulfur dioxide,
  • nitrogen oxides,
  • volatile organic compounds (VOCs),
  • carbon monoxide, and
  • lead.

5
(No Transcript)
6
(No Transcript)
7
Secondary Pollutants
  • Atmospheric sulfuric acid is one example of a
    secondary pollutant.
  • Air pollution in urban and industrial areas is
    often called smog.
  • Photochemical smog, a noxious mixture of gases
    and particles, is produced when strong sunlight
    triggers photochemical reactions in the
    atmosphere.
  • The major component of photochemical smog is
    ozone.
  • Although considerable progress has been made in
    controlling air pollution, the quality of the air
    we breathe remains a serious public health
    problem.

8
Controlling Air Pollution through Regulations
  • Economic activity, population growth,
    meteorological conditions, and regulatory efforts
    to control emissions, all influence the trends in
    air pollution.
  • The Clean Air Act of 1970 mandated the setting of
    standards for four of the primary pollutants
  • particulates,
  • sulfur dioxide,
  • carbon monoxide, and
  • Nitrogen
  • as well as the secondary pollutant ozone.

9
Have Regulations Helped?
  • In 1997, the emissions of the five major primary
    pollutants in the United States were about 31
    percent lower than 1970.
  • In 1990, Congress passed the Clean Air Act
    Amendments, which further tightened controls on
    air quality.
  • Regulations and standards regarding the
    provisions of the Clean Air Act Amendments of
    1990 are periodically established and revised.

10
(No Transcript)
11
Air Pollution Occurrences
  • The most obvious factor influencing air pollution
    is the quantity of contaminants emitted into the
    atmosphere.
  • However, when air pollution episodes take place,
    they are not generally the result of a drastic
    increase in the output of pollutants instead,
    they occur because of changes in certain
    atmospheric conditions.
  • Two of the most important atmospheric conditions
    affecting the dispersion of pollutants are
  • (1) the strength of the wind and
  • (2) the stability of the air.

12
Air Mixing
  • The direct effect of wind speed is to influence
    the concentration of pollutants.
  • Atmospheric stability determines the extent to
    which vertical motions will mix the pollution
    with cleaner air above the surface layers.
  • The vertical distance between Earth's surface and
    the height to which convectional movements extend
    is called the mixing depth.
  • Generally, the greater the mixing depth, the
    better the air quality.

13
Inversions
  • Temperature inversions represent a situation in
    which the atmosphere is very stable and the
    mixing depth is significantly restricted.
  • When an inversion exists and winds are light,
    diffusion is inhibited and high pollution
    concentrations are to be expected in areas where
    pollution sources exist.
  • Surface temperature inversions form because the
    ground is a more effective radiator than the air
    above. Inversions aloft are associated with
    sinking air that characterizes centers of high
    air pressure (anticyclones).

14
Inversion
15
This is an example of a generalized temperature
profile for a surface inversion.
Temperature-profile changes in bottom diagram
after the sun has heated the surface.
16
An Inversion Aloft
17
Acid Precipitation
  • In most areas within several hundred kilometers
    of large centers of human activity, the pH value
    is much lower than the usual value found in
    unpopulated areas.
  • This acidic rain or snow, formed when sulfur and
    nitrogen oxides produced as by-products of
    combustion and industrial activity are converted
    into acids during complex atmospheric reactions,
    is called acid precipitation.

18
Acid Precipitation (cont.)
  • The atmosphere is both the avenue by which
    offending compounds travel from sources to the
    sites where they are deposited and the medium in
    which the combustion products are transformed
    into acidic substances.
  • Beyond possible impacts on health, the damaging
    effects of acid precipitation on the environment
    include the lowering of pH in thousands of lakes
    in Scandinavia and eastern North America.
  • Besides producing water that is toxic to fish,
    acid precipitation has also detrimentally altered
    complex ecosystems by many interactions at many
    levels of organization.

19
Key Terminology
  • Natural air pollution Primary pollutants
  • Secondary pollutants Smog
  • Photochemical smog Photochemical reactions
  • Ozone Clean Air Act (1970)
  • Mixing depth Inversion
  • Surface inversion Inversion aloft
  • Acid Precipitation

20
Pertinent Web Sites
  • Acid Rain FAQs (Environment Canada))
  • Answers to frequently asked questions about acid
    rain.
  • Air Pollution - U.S. EPA Office of Air and
    Radiation
  • EPA's Office of Air and Radiation (OAR) deals
    with issues that affect the quality of our air
    and protection from exposure to harmful
    radiation. OAR develops national programs,
    technical policies, and regulations for
    controlling air pollution and radiation exposure.
    Areas of concern to OAR include indoor and
    outdoor air quality, stationary and mobile
    sources of air pollution, radon, acid rain,
    stratospheric ozone depletion, radiation
    protection, and pollution prevention.
  • Atmospheric Ozone Concentrations
  • Ozone concentration maps from the World
    Meteorological Organization (WMO).
  • Atmospheric Pollution (EPA)
  • Here is the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
    atmospheric pollution home page.
  • Atmospheric Research Information Centre (ARIC)
  • The ARIC is a multidisciplinary centre of
    excellence for the study and resolution of
    atmospheric pollution issues located at
    Manchester University in England.

21
  • Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center
    (CDIAC)
  • The Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center
    (CDIAC) is the primary global-change data and
    information analysis center of the U.S.
    Department of Energy (DOE).
  • Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
  • Here is the Environmental Protection Agency's
    (EPA) home Page.
  • EPA Internet Site Search Engine
  • The Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA)
    search page can be used to search the extensive
    EPA data base.
  • EPA Topics, Browse
  • Here is a site with access to a wide variety of
    topics related to the environment hosted by the
    Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
  • Montreal Protocol (AFEAS)
  • An international agreement, known as the Montreal
    Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone
    Layer, controls the production and consumption of
    substances that can cause ozone depletion.
  • National Air Quality Trends Brochure (1996) - Six
    Principal Pollutants
  • This site has an in-depth report on the six
    principal atmospheric pollutants.
  • Ozone Depletion
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com