1 / 23

Air Pollution

Air Pollution. Review of last lecture. Effects of different surface types: desert, city, grassland, forest, sea. Deeper heat/water reservoir, decreased Bowen ratio, thinner BL and enhanced convective instability.

kimball
Télécharger la présentation

Air Pollution

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Air Pollution

  2. Review of last lecture • Effects of different surface types: desert, city, grassland, forest, sea. Deeper heat/water reservoir, decreased Bowen ratio, thinner BL and enhanced convective instability. • Effects of vegetation: (1) makes heat/water reservoir deeper, (2) enhance evaporation, (3) grows and dies in response to environmental conditions • Heat island effect. 7 causes • Community land model (CLM)

  3. How do human activities change the global climate? Human beings are changing the global climate system in three different ways: • Change land cover (deforestation and afforestation) • Release or cleanse pollutants (aerosols) • Release or cleanse greenhouse gases

  4. Introduction • Air pollutants are gases, liquids or solids in the air that can adversely affect plant and/or animal life. • Primary pollutants are pollutants that are emitted directly by natural or anthropogenic (manmade) processes. • Secondary pollutants are pollutants that arise from chemical reactions of atmospheric gases with gases emitted by natural or anthropogenic processes. • There are six major pollutants: particulates, carbon oxides, sulfur dioxides, nitrogen oxides, volatile organic compounds, ozone

  5. Major pollutants: (1) Particulates • Particulates (aerosols) are solid or liquid matter suspended in the air (from 0.1 to 100 µm in size). • PM10 (<10 µm) enters lungs (associated with asthma); PM2.5 (<2.5 µm) even more dangerous (lung cancer).

  6. Major pollutants: (2) Carbon monoxide • Carbon monoxide (CO) is a colorless, odorless gas from volcanic eruptions, forest fires and other processes. • Extremely toxic and dangerous to humans and animals.

  7. Major pollutants: (3) Sulfur dioxide • Sulfur compounds can occur as gaseous or aerosol forms. • respiratory irritant. contributes to acid fog and acid rain.

  8. Major pollutants: (4) Nitrogen Oxides (NOX) • Nitric oxide (NO) is a nontoxic, colorless, and odorless gas. • Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) is a toxic, yellow to reddish-brown gas that is pungent and corrosive. Provides polluted air with the yellow to reddish brown color.

  9. Major pollutants: (5) Ozone • Ozone, NO2, formaldehyde and other gases combine with solar radiation to form Los Angeles-type photochemical smog. • causes respiratory and heart problems.

  10. Major pollutants: (6) Volatile Organic Compounds (Hydrocarbons) • are made of carbon and hydrogen. Examples: methane, butane, propane, octane, etc. • Health effects vary

  11. Video: Science to Protect the Air We Breath (by EPA) • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3PO_3exwN-I

  12. Air Quality Index • The EPA created an index for air pollution monitoring called the Air Quality Index (AQI). • A formula applies to ozone, particulates, carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen dioxide by expressing each pollutant on a scale that ranges from 0 to 500. • The official AQI for any location at a particular time is the highest of the five individual pollutant values.

  13. Atmospheric Conditions and Air Pollution (1) Effect of Winds on Horizontal Transport • High concentrations of pollutants in a small area (usually due to anthropogenic sources) are the biggest air pollution problems. • The horizontal and vertical transport of air pollutants by winds help control the local concentrations of pollutants. • Concentrations are inversely related to wind speed.

  14. Atmospheric Conditions and Air Pollution (2) Effect of Atmospheric Stability • There are many turbulent eddies in an unstable boundary layer, but few in a stable boundary layer • Eddies can mix air vertically. Unstable Neutral Stable

  15. Inversions • Inversions are absolutely stable and free of eddies • Inversions can trap pollutants near the Earth’s surface. Low level inversion Upper level inversion (most dangerous)

  16. The smog layer in Los Angeles Base of inversions

  17. Mountains may make the situation even worse

  18. The pollution layer in Utah Base of inversions

  19. History of air pollution(1) The 13th – 19th century • In medieval London, pollution from coal burning was seen as such a serious matter that a commission was established in 1285 to investigate the problem. In 1307, during the reign of Edward I, legislation was introduced to prevent the use of sea coal in kilns and by blacksmiths. It proved largely ineffective. • London rapidly changed from a wood-burning city to one that relied on imported coal. By the end of Elizabeth I's reign in 1603, coal consumption in the city had risen to more than 50,000 tons a year.

  20. History of air pollution(2) The 20th century • The Great Fog of 1952. Cold weather, combined with an anticyclone and windless conditions, trapped the pollution from Thames-side power stations, domestic fires and London's new fleet of 8,000 diesel buses. The total number of fatalities was about 12,000. • The 1948 Donora smog. A warm air pocket had passed high above the town, trapping cooler air below and sealing in pollutants. 14,000 residents experienced severe respiratory and cardiovascular problems. The death toll was nearly 40. • Led to several changes in practices and regulations, including the Clean Air Act 1956. Source

  21. History of air pollution(3) The 21st Century • As China has industrialized, various forms of pollution have increased, which has caused widespread environmental and health problems. According to the World Bank in 2007, 16 of the world's 20 most polluted cities are in China. • Air pollution in India is a serious issue with the major sources being fuelwood and biomass burning, fuel adulteration, and vehicle emission. The 2012 Environmental Performance Index ranked India as having the poorest relative air quality out of 132 countries. Image Source

  22. Summary • Air pollution. 2 categories • 6 types of major pollutants: particulates, carbon oxides, sulfur dioxides, nitrogen oxides, volatile organic compounds, ozone • Air quality index • Atmospheric Conditions and Air Pollution (1) effect of wind, (2) effect of stability and turbulence • History of air pollution: The Medieval pollution, The 16th-19th centuries, The 20th century, The 21st century

  23. Works cited • http://www.airquality.utah.gov/clean_air/archive/inversion.htm

More Related