1 / 20

Acid Rain

Acid Rain. By: Marian Liwanen & Melanie Koh. What is Acid Rain??. Rain made acidic by pollutants in the air Acid rain is a type of acid deposition Two types of acid deposition are: Wet deposition Dry deposition. Wet Deposition.

enrico
Download Presentation

Acid Rain

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. Acid Rain By: Marian Liwanen & Melanie Koh

  2. What is Acid Rain?? • Rain made acidic by pollutants in the air • Acid rain is a type of acid deposition • Two types of acid deposition are: • Wet deposition • Dry deposition

  3. Wet Deposition • Refers to acidic rain, fog, snow and sleet and any other precipitations • It removes acids from the atmosphere • This results in the acids being delivered to the Earth’s surface and affects a variety of plants and animals

  4. Dry Deposition • Refers to acidic gases and particles • About half of the acidity in the atmosphere falls back to earth through dry deposition • The wind blows the acidic gases onto buildings, cars, homes and trees

  5. Dry Deposition • Dry deposition can be washed from surfaces by rainstorms • The acids from this combined with acid rain makes the combination more acidic

  6. How is it formed? • carbon dioxide + water  carbonic acid • Carbon dioxide in the air dissolves in raindrops to form carbonic acid. • sulfur dioxide + water  sulfuric acid • Sulfur dioxide dissolves in rainwater to form sulfurous acid.

  7. How is it formed? • This also reacts with oxygen in the air to form sulfur trioxide (SO3) which dissolves in rainwater to form sulfuric acid. • nitrogen dioxide + water  nitric acid • Nitrogen dioxide also reacts with water to form nitric acid.

  8. Why is it a problem? • Acid rain is a major problem affecting people, lakes and streams, buildings and forests. • Air pollution like sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide can cause respiratory problems or make them worse. • Nitrogen oxide causes ground-level ozone.

  9. Why is it a problem? • This ozone causes respiratory problems such as pneumonia and bronchitis and can even cause permanent lung damage. • Acid rain is also very harmful to forests. • Acid rain that seeps into the ground can dissolve nutrients such as magnesium and calcium that trees need to be healthy.

  10. Why is it a problem? • Acid rain also causes aluminum to be released into the soil making it harder for trees and plants to take up water. • Trees in higher altitudes are much more affected because of their exposure to acidic clouds.

  11. Why is it a problem? • Important nutrients are taken away making it easier for insects and cold weather to damage the trees. • Lakes and streams have a pH level of about 6.5. Acid rain however has caused these levels to drop especially during heavy downpours of rain or when snow melts in the spring.

  12. Why is it a problem? • The increase of the level of acidity affects phytoplankton, mayflies, rainbow trout and many other creatures part of the food web. • Acid rain has a corrosive effect on limestone, sandstone, marble buildings and sculptures, causing them to look worn out and old.

  13. Worst affected places in the world • Most of the countries in the Eastern Europe • From Poland northward into Scandinavia • Eastern third of the United States • South-eastern Canada

  14. Worst affected places in the world • China • Taiwan • Japan • Australia • South-east Asia • Germany • London • Switzerland • The Netherlands

  15. Why are these places affected? • Coal burning • Pollution-generating heating methods • Smoke • Industrial dust emissions

  16. Why are these places affected? • Power plants • Vehicles that burn diesel and gasoline • Exhaust of vehicles that release sulfur dioxide • Air pollution

  17. What is being done??? • Regulations: • Enforce a fixed amount of sulfur dioxide that power plants release • Issue allowances to power plants to cover their sulfur dioxide emissions

  18. What is being done? • Minimizing pollution: • Using coal that contains less sulfur • “Wash” the coal to remove some sulfur • Installing equipment called scrubbers – removes sulfur dioxide from gases that leave the smokestack. • Some power plants are changing the way they burn coal to reduce the amount of nitrogen oxide produced

  19. What is being done? • Using different energy resources: • Using renewable energy sources • Solar energy • Wind energy • Produce energy without the use of fossil fuels

  20. What is being done? • Vehicles – Cars and trucks: • Car manufacturers are reducing the amount of nitrogen oxides and other pollutants produced • Using catalytic converter – to reduce nitrogen oxides produced by cars • Using cleaner fuels – natural gas • Using low emissions vehicles

More Related