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Understanding Air Pollution Sources & Effects

The document discusses air pollution and its sources, effects, and solutions. It describes the major components of air like nitrogen and oxygen and how pollution disrupts the atmosphere's composition and ecosystem services. The main sources of air pollution are transportation, industry, and intentional forest fires. Major air pollutants include particulate matter, nitrogen oxides, sulfur oxides, carbon oxides, hydrocarbons and ozone. Air pollution causes respiratory issues and diseases. Children are especially vulnerable. Stratospheric ozone protects from UV rays but is depleted by chemicals like CFCs. Indoor air can be more polluted than outdoor air.

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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Topics covered

  • UV Radiation,
  • Asbestos,
  • Outdoor Pollution Sources,
  • Toxic Materials,
  • Emission Standards,
  • Carcinogenic Effects,
  • Indoor Air Pollution,
  • Climate Moderation,
  • Primary Pollutants,
  • Lead Gasoline
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views30 pages

Understanding Air Pollution Sources & Effects

The document discusses air pollution and its sources, effects, and solutions. It describes the major components of air like nitrogen and oxygen and how pollution disrupts the atmosphere's composition and ecosystem services. The main sources of air pollution are transportation, industry, and intentional forest fires. Major air pollutants include particulate matter, nitrogen oxides, sulfur oxides, carbon oxides, hydrocarbons and ozone. Air pollution causes respiratory issues and diseases. Children are especially vulnerable. Stratospheric ozone protects from UV rays but is depleted by chemicals like CFCs. Indoor air can be more polluted than outdoor air.

Uploaded by

Wew
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Topics covered

  • UV Radiation,
  • Asbestos,
  • Outdoor Pollution Sources,
  • Toxic Materials,
  • Emission Standards,
  • Carcinogenic Effects,
  • Indoor Air Pollution,
  • Climate Moderation,
  • Primary Pollutants,
  • Lead Gasoline

Air Pollution

BY: DANDY P. SALVADORA


What to discuss?

o Atmosphere as a Resource
o Types and Sources of Air Pollution
• Major Classes of Air Pollutants
• Sources of Outdoor Air Pollutants
• Urban Air Pollution
o Effects of Air Pollution
Atmosphere as a Resource
o Atmospheric
Composition
• Nitrogen 78.08%
• Oxygen 20.95%
• Argon 0.93%
• Carbon dioxide 0.04%
o Ecosystem services
• Blocks UV radiation
• Moderates the
climate
• Redistributes water in
the hydrologic cycle
Types and Sources of Air Pollution
o Air Pollution
• Chemicals added to the atmosphere by natural
events or human activities in high enough
concentrations to be harmful
o Two categories
• Primary Air Pollutant
• Harmful substance that is emitted directly into the
atmosphere
• 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
Major Air Pollutants
Major Classes of Air Pollutants

o Particulate Material
o Nitrogen Oxides
o Sulfur Oxides
o Carbon Oxides
o Hydrocarbons
o Ozone
Particulate Material

o Thousands of different solid or liquid


particles suspended in air
• Includes: soil particles, soot, lead, asbestos,
sea salt, and sulfuric acid droplets
o Dangerous for 2 reasons
• May contain materials with toxic or
carcinogenic effects
• Extremely small particles can become lodged in
lungs
Nitrogen and Sulfur Oxides

o Nitrogen Oxides
• Gases produced by the chemical interactions
between atmospheric nitrogen and oxygen at
high temperature
• Problems
• Greenhouse gases
• Cause difficulty breathing
o Sulfur Oxides
• Gases produced by the chemical interactions
between sulfur and oxygen
• Causes acid precipitation
Carbon Oxides and Hydrocarbons

o Carbon Oxides
• Gases carbon monoxide (CO) and carbon
dioxide (CO2)
• Greenhouse gases
o Hydrocarbons
• Diverse group of organic compounds that
contain only hydrogen and carbon (ex: CH4-
methane)
• Some are related to photochemical smog and
greenhouse gases
Ozone

o Tropospheric Ozone
• Man- made pollutant in the lower atmosphere
• Secondary air pollutant
• Component of photochemical smog
o Stratospheric Ozone
• Essential component that screens out UV
radiation in the upper atmosphere
• Man- made pollutants (ex: CFCs) can destroy it
Sources of Outdoor Air Pollution

o Two main sources


• Transportation
• Industry
o Intentional forest
fires is also high
Urban Air Pollution
o Photochemical Smog (ex: Los Angeles below)
• Brownish-orange haze formed by chemical reactions
involving sunlight, nitrogen oxide, and hydrocarbons
Formation of Photochemical Smog
Sources of Smog
Effects of Air Pollution
o Low level exposure
• Irritates eyes
• Causes inflammation of respiratory tract
o Can develop into chronic respiratory
diseases
Health Effects of Air Pollution
o Sulfur Dioxide and Particulate material
• Irritate respiratory tract and impair ability of
lungs to exchange gases
o Nitrogen Dioxides
• Causes airway restriction
o Carbon monoxide
• Binds with iron in blood hemoglobin
• Causes headache, fatigue, drowsiness, death
o Ozone
• Causes burning eyes, coughing, and chest
discomfort
Children and Air Pollution

o Greater health threat to children than


adults
• Air pollution can restrict lung development
• Children breath more often than adults
o Children who live in high ozone areas are
more likely to develop asthma
Other Ways to Improve Air Quality

o Reduce sulfur content in gasoline from its


current average of 330 ppm to 300 ppm
• Sulfur clogs catalytic converters
o Require federal emission standards for all
passenger vehicles
• Including SUVs, trucks and minivans
o Require emission testing for all vehicles
• Including diesel
Ozone Depletion in Stratosphere
o Ozone Protects earth from UV radiation
• Part of the electromagnetic spectrum with
wavelengths just shorter than visible light
Ozone Depletion in Stratosphere

o Ozone thinning/hole
• First identified in 1985
over Antarctica
o Caused by
• human-produced bromine
and chlorine containing
chemicals
• Ex: CFCs
Ozone Depletion in Stratosphere

o 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
• Isolates it from the warmer air in the rest of the
planet
o Polar stratospheric clouds form
• Enables Cl and Br to destroy ozone
Effects of Ozone Depletion

o Higher levels of UV-


radiation hitting the
earth
• Eye cataracts
• Skin cancer (right)
• Weakened immunity
o May disrupt
ecosystems
o May damage crops
and forests
Air Pollution Around the World
o Air quality is deteriorating
rapidly in developing countries
o Shenyang, China
• Residents only see sunlight a few
weeks each year
o Developing countries have older
cars
• Still use leaded gasoline
o 5 worst cities in world
• Beijing, China; Mexico City, Mexico;
Shanghai, China; Tehran, Iran; and
Calcutta, India
Indoor Air
Pollution
o Pollutants can be
5-100X greater
than outdoors
o Most common:
• Radon, cigarette
smoke, carbon
monoxide,
nitrogen dioxide,
formaldehyde
pesticides, lead,
cleaning solvents,
ozone, and
asbestos
Indoor Air Pollution - Radon
Radon sinks in air
because it has a
high density; it is
Radon is a therefore often
colorless, found in the
odorless gas, basements of
the primary homes, particularly
source of in areas where
indoor air with a lot of shale
pollution and boulders in
the soil.
Air Pollution

BY: DANDY P. SALVADORA

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