1 / 27

AIR POLLUTION

Learn about air pollution, the different types of pollutants, their sources, and their impact on human health and the environment. Discover ways to reduce air pollution and improve air quality.

bbrittany
Download Presentation

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. What is Pollution? • Pollution: an unwanted change in an environment caused by the introduction of harmful conditions • Point source pollution: comes from definite source ex-smokestack • Non-point source pollution: source of pollution difficult to pinpoint ex- runoff from land

  3. Primary Vs. Secondary • Primary pollutant: enters the environment as-is; already a pollutant ex: particulates from a smokestack • Secondary pollutant: reacts with other chemicals and becomes a pollutant ex: smog

  4. Air Pollution Can be visible or invisible Anything that is in the air in quantities that are detrimental, whether from manmade or natural activities. Air pollution can travel a long distance and often affects areas where it wasn’t produced Ex- Alaska’s North Slope receives pollution from Europe and Asia due to air currents

  5. Sulfur Oxides Sulfur Oxides ( SOx): • From burning fossil fuels: contributor to acid rain (combines with water to form sulfuric acid), generation of electricity (coal-fired plants), and industry • regulated by Clean Air Act; decreasing • respiratory irritant; also lowers pH of water and harms animal and plant life, structures

  6. Acid Deposition • Sometimes called Acid Rain • Has a pH below 5.6 • It is a regional air pollution problem because cities and towns down wind of coal-burning powerplants often feel the worst affects. • Calcium Carbonate or limestone is often used to help change the pH of soils.

  7. Nitrogen Oxides • Clean Air Act, also decreasing • same health issues as SOx Nitrogen Oxides (NOX): • fossil fuels; vehicle emissions, electricity plants, industry • acid rain contributor (forms nitric acid with water)

  8. Electrostatic Precipitation SOx and NOx are controlled in industry by “scrubbers” : systems that inject a dry reagent or slurry into a dirty exhaust stream to "wash out" acid gases, and charged plates to attract particulate matter.

  9. Carbon Monoxide Carbon Monoxide (CO): • vehicle emissions, construction and heavy equipment, fires, industry • poisonous, causes suffocation, aggravation of respiratory ailments • Regulated by the Clean Air Act

  10. Lead Lead (Pb) • since removed from fuels and other products like paint, levels in air have dropped dramatically • still an issue in older buildings • toxic; accumulates and damages nervous system • regulated under CAA

  11. Ground-level Ozone Ground-level ozone: • created by chem. Rxns b/t oxides of nitrogen (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOC) in presence of sunlight • respiratory irritant; can reduce lung function and inflame the linings of the lungs • primary component of smog • reg. by CAA

  12. Smog/Ozone • Formed when volatile organic compounds (like paint fumes) and nitrogen oxides (car exhaust) react in the presence of sunlight . • Children in high-ozone communities developed asthma at a rate three times higher than those in the low-ozone communities. (California study). • Can make those with heart and lung disease more at risk; held near ground by thermal inversions • Crop damage

  13. Particulate Matter ParticulateMatter: alsoknown as particle pollution or PM • mixture of small solid particles and liquid droplets • made up of acid, organic chemicals, metals, and soil or dust particles • effects: respiratory irritant, decreased lung function, lung disease (ex-cancer)

  14. Dust or Particulate Matter • Comes from smokestacks, farmers’ fields, construction sites, quarries, wind erosion • Reduces visibility • Small particles (< 10 μm) can be inhaled • Studies show that over a long period of time, this can cause lung damage

  15. Pollution from fuel burning – factories, power plants, lawn mowers, BBQ grills, forest fires • CO reduces the ability of the blood to carry oxygen, effects central nervous system, causes sluggishness. • NOx contributes to ozone formation, adds nutrients to Chesapeake Bay, acid rain component. • SO2 causes acid rain, may irritate lining of lungs.

  16. Hazardous Air Pollutants • Approximately 188 chemicals on list, including mercury ( from coal plants) lead, formaldehyde • Causes birth defects • Cancer • Burning eyes, lungs, skin • Damage to the environment www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/allabout.html

  17. Indoor Air Pollution Air quality in homes is also a concern- accumulations of dust, dander, mold spores, VOC’s released from furniture, carpets, paints, etc., • as our houses become more energy efficient their air quality can decrease!

  18. Indoor Air Pollutants • Radon – 222 • Asbestos • Formaldahyde • Tobacco Smoke • Carbon monoxide

  19. Radon-222 • Naturally occurring colorless and odorless radioactive gas. • Radon is found in soil and rock surrounding a house foundation. • Long term exposure can cause lung cancer. • If detected, should be vented to outside or source sealed off

  20. Asbestos • A material often found in older house and buildings. Used to insulate pipes, ceiling tiles, and floor tiles. • When asbestos becomes old it is known as friable. • Friable asbestos is dangerous because it can be inhaled into ones lungs and scar the lung tissue causing lung cancer.

  21. Formaldehyde • A colorless, extremely irritating chemical. • Found in many building materials such as plywood, particleboard, paneling, furniture, drapes, adhesives in carpeting.

  22. Tobacco Smoke and Carbon Monoxide • Cigarettes • Cause lung cancer, respiratory ailments, heart disease. • Carbon Monoxide is caused by faulty furnaces, unvented gas stoves and kerosene heaters and wood stoves that don’t burn efficiently.

  23. Regional Haze

  24. Regulations to Protect the Air • Industrial Revolution created soot, smoke and other pollutants which caused health problems and many deaths. • Local jurisdictions were responsible for regulating pollution. • 1970 the newly formed Environmental Protection Agency was tasked with the Clean Air Act.

  25. Clean Air Act • Sets standards for air quality (NAAQS) • Based on health studies • Protects the most sensitive people • Requires new sources to use pollution controls • Older sources will eventually get phased out (in theory) • Major sources must show no impact or must reduce pollutants if modifying or expanding

  26. What can you do to reduce air pollution? • Carpool or reduce trips • Do not let your car idle • Use water-based paints, low-VOC solvents • Consider hybrid cars • Conserve electricity • Recycle goods • No open burning • Maintain heaters/AC • Use hand tools for yard work • Buy low-energy appliances • Insulate your home

More Related