EVR FINAL REVIEW chp. 19 Air Pollution
The Clean Air Act
1955 and significant updates in 1970 and 1990 Authorizes EPA to set limits on amount of specific air pollutants permitted Act has led to decreases in air pollutants
Watershed vs airshed
A watershed is the area of land where all of the water that falls in it and drains off of it goes to a common outlet. What determines it is topography An airshed is the air supply of a given region, also the geographical area covered by air supply. What determines it is topography and the pollutant we are talking about.
Managing Acid Deposition
Acid deposition is cross boundary issue Pollution in one place, problem in another
Air Pollution Around the World
Air quality is deteriorating rapidly in developing countries Developing countries have older cars Shenyang, China Residents only see sunlight a few weeks each year
5 worst cities in the world for air pollution
Beijing, China and New Delhi, India are tied for first; Santiago, Chile; Mexico City, Mexico; Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
Ecosystem services of the atmosphere
Blocks UV radiation Moderates the climate Redistributes water in the hydrologic cycle
Photochemical Smog
Brownish-orange haze formed by chemical reactions involving sunlight, nitrogen oxide, and hydrocarbons ex) los angeles
Efforts to Reduce Ozone in S. California
CA consolidated efforts to improve air quality (1977) Improvements due to a few major regulations
Air pollution
Chemicals added to the atmosphere by natural events or human activities in high enough concentrations to be harmful
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
Contributes to smog Ex: compounds released from paints, cleaning products, dry cleaners, bakeries
Effects of Acid Deposition
Declining Aquatic Animal Populations Thin-shelled eggs prevent bird reproduction Calcium is unavailable in acidic soil Forest decline
Hydrocarbons
Diverse group of organic compounds that contain only hydrogen and carbon (ex: CH4 - methane) Some are related to photochemical smog and greenhouse gases
Smokestacks with electrostatic precipitator
Electrode imparts negative charge on the air pollutants Negatively charged pollutants are then attracted to positively charged walls- fall into collector
Stratospheric Ozone
Essential component that screens out UV radiation in the upper atmosphere (want this) Man- made pollutants (ex: CFCs) can destroy it
Forest burning in Sumatra
Fires are set to clear forests for planting Burning results in severe air pollution Silviculture (commercial production of forest products) Smoke is full of small particles that can lodge in lungs and cause illness/disease
Ozone thinning/hole in the Stratosphere
First identified in 1985 over Antarctica Occurs annually between Sept and Nov because: Caused by human-produced bromine and chlorine containing chemicals (Ex: CFCs)
Carbon oxides
Gases carbon monoxide (CO) and carbon dioxide (CO2) Greenhouse gases
Nitrogen oxides
Gases produced by the chemical interactions between atmospheric nitrogen and oxygen at high temperature Greenhouse gases that cause difficulty breathing (problems for human health)
Sulfur oxides
Gases produced by the chemical interactions between sulfur and oxygen Causes acid precipitation
Children and air pollution
Greater health threat to children than adults Air pollution can restrict lung development Children breath more often than adults Children who live in high ozone areas are more likely to develop asthma
Primary air pollutant
Harmful substance emitted directly into the atmosphere ex) CO, SO2, CO2, NO2, NO, most hydrocarbons, most particulates
Secondary air pollutant
Harmful substance formed in the atmosphere when a primary air pollutant reacts with substances normally found in the atmosphere or with other air pollutants ex) HNO2, HNO3, H2O2, O3, SO3, H2SO4, salts, most NO3-, most SO4 (2-)
Effects of Ozone Depletion
Higher levels of UV-radiation hitting the earth Eye cataracts Skin cancer (right) Weakened immunity May disrupt ecosystems May damage crops and forests
Why do we care about air pollution?
Human health (children and older people), acid rain depositions have impacts on ecosystems
Cigarette smoke (indoor air pollution)
Increasing in developing nations
What happens when polar stratospheric clouds form to the ozone layer?
It enables chemical reactions that cause Cl and Br to destroy ozone
Effects of Air Pollution
Low level exposure Irritates eyes Causes inflammation of respiratory tract Can develop into chronic respiratory diseases Emphysema Chronic bronchitis
Tropospheric Ozone
Man-made pollutant in the lower atmosphere (don't want it) Secondary air pollutant Component of photochemical smog
Dangers of particulate material
May contain materials with toxic/carcinogenic effects Small particles can become lodged in lungs (respiratory problems)
Recovery of Ozone layer
Montreal Protocol (1987) Reduction of CFCs Started using HCFCs (greenhouse gas) Phase out of all ozone destroying chemicals is underway globally Satellite pictures in 2000 indicated that ozone layer was recovering Full recovery will not occur until 2050
What is the most dramatic decrease due to the Clean Air Act?
Most dramatic is lead - decreased by 98% since 1970 (due to switch to unleaded gasoline)
Radon (indoor air pollution)
Natural form of ionizing radiation Damaging to surface tissues if not diluted with air Trapped in houses
Atmospheric composition
Nitrogen 78.08% Oxygen 20.95% Argon 0.93% Carbon dioxide 0.04%
Indoor air pollution
Pollutants can be 5-100x greater than outdoors Radon, cigarette smoke, carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, formaldehyde pesticides, lead, cleaning solvents, ozone, and asbestos
Methods of controlling air pollution
Smokestacks with electrostatic precipitator Smokestacks with scrubbers Particulate material can also be controlled by proper excavating techniques Cars - catalytic converters
Acid Deposition
Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide emissions react with water vapor in the atmosphere and form acids that return to the surface as either dry or wet deposition
Hole over Antarctica requires two conditions:
Sunlight just returning to polar region Circumpolar vortex- a mass of cold air that circulates around the southern polar region
Temperature inversions
Temperature increases with altitude (usually reverse) Pollution is trapped in high concentrations near surface and is not distributed
Particulate material
Thousands of different solid or liquid particles suspended in air Includes: soil particles, soot, lead, asbestos, sea salt, and sulfuric acid droplets. main ones are PM 2.5 and 10
Ozone protects earth from _____
UV radiation
Acid deposition has impacted: the Black Forest of southwestern Germany all of these choices are correct tree health in the Appalachian Mountains Adirondacks of New York State the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C
all of these choices are correct
Air pollution is a greater health threat to children than adults because: children need more oxygen than adults children breathe more air per pound of body weight than adults children have a higher metabolic rate than adults children's lungs are still developing all of these choices are correct
all of these choices are correct
What happens when you burn coal?
all of these things are generated at the same time. you may have moe or less sulfur oxides. you can reduce this type of pollution
The two atmospheric gases most important to humans and other organisms are: carbon dioxide and oxygen carbon monoxide and oxygen carbon dioxide and nitrogen oxygen and argon hydrogen and oxygen
carbon dioxide and oxygen
In the absence of air pollution control devices, which of the following is the most significant source of sulfur dioxide? refrigeration and air conditioning coal-burning power plants motor vehicles fertilizers fire retardants
coal-burning power plants
Sources of sulfur oxides
electric power plants and other industries
The difference between primary and secondary air pollutants is that primary air pollutants: are not harmful to humans, whereas secondary air pollutants may be toxic to humans only affect plants, while secondary pollutants affect plants and animals are the direct result of natural processes, whereas secondary air pollutants are the result of human activity enter the atmosphere directly, whereas secondary pollutants form from other substances released into the atmosphere are smaller, primary molecules
enter the atmosphere directly, whereas secondary pollutants form from other substances released into the atmosphere
Sources of ozone
formed in atmosphere (secondary air pollutant)
Harm to humans from radon is greatest: in cities in high-rise office buildings outdoors near nuclear power plants in well-insulated homes
in well-insulated homes
Air pollution has been linked to all of the following human health problems except: suppression of the immune system inflammation of the respiratory tract increased susceptibility to West Nile impaired reflexes and increased drowsiness potential development of emphysema and chronic bronchitis
increased susceptibility to West Nile
Sources of particulate matter
industries, electric power plants, motor vehicles, construction, agriculture
The two main human sources of primary air pollutants are: incineration and transportation agriculture and industry agriculture and residential sources industry and transportation industry and incineration
industry and transportation
The Clean Air Act focuses on 6 pollutants:
lead, particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, and ozone
Chlorofluorocarbons such as CFC-12 are released into the atmosphere by: smoke stacks nuclear power plants leaking air conditioners and old refrigerators. car exhaust pesticides
leaking air conditioners and old refrigerators.
Sources of carbon monoxide
motor vehicles, industries, fireplaces
Sources of nitrogen oxides
motor vehicles, industries, heavily fertilized farm land
Which of the following is NOT an effect of acid deposition? decline in aquatic animal populations mutations and skin cancer decreased hatching success in some birds destruction of monuments and buildings forest decline
mutations and skin cancer
Urban areas receive less sunlight than rural areas, partly as a result of greater quantities of __________ in the air. ozone hydrocarbons nitrogen oxides particulate matter sulfur oxides
particulate matter
List of major classes of air pollutants
particulate matter nitrogen oxides sulfur oxides carbon oxides hydrocarbons ozone
Electrostatic precipitators, and scrubbers in smokestacks, are used primarily to remove which air pollutant? carbon dioxide sulfur dioxide particulate matter ozone oxygen
particulate matter (can also say sulfur dioxide)
Two categories of air pollution
primary air pollutant secondary air pollutant
Forest decline can be caused by all of the following EXCEPT: lead ozone radon acid deposition insects
radon
Lead in the atmosphere has decreased significantly since the 1970s primarily due to: new CAFE standards for automobiles the invention of the catalytic converter increased use of scrubbers in coal-fired power plants the phasing out of leaded paint in buildings replacing leaded gasoline with unleaded gasoline
replacing leaded gasoline with unleaded gasoline
Industrial Smog
sulfur oxides and PM (found in developing countries)
Which of the following air pollutants is correctly paired with one of its major effects? nitrogen oxides — blocks UV radiation carbon oxides — corrosion of metal hydrocarbons — reduced visibility sulfur oxides — acid precipitation particulate matter — production of photochemical smog
sulfur oxides — acid precipitation
Two main sources of outdoor air pollution
transportation and industry. intentional forest fires are also high as well
Why is the atmosphere the ultimate commons?
we all share it