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What’s coming up???. Oct 25 The atmosphere, part 1 Ch. 8 Oct 27 Midterm … No lecture Oct 29 The atmosphere, part 2 Ch. 8 Nov 1 Light, blackbodies, Bohr Ch. 9 Nov 3 Postulates of QM, p-in-a-box Ch. 9 Nov 5,8 Hydrogen atom Ch. 9 Nov 10,12 Multi-electron atoms Ch.10
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What’s coming up??? • Oct 25 The atmosphere, part 1 Ch. 8 • Oct 27 Midterm … No lecture • Oct 29 The atmosphere, part 2 Ch. 8 • Nov 1 Light, blackbodies, Bohr Ch. 9 • Nov 3 Postulates of QM, p-in-a-box Ch. 9 • Nov 5,8 Hydrogen atom Ch. 9 • Nov 10,12 Multi-electron atoms Ch.10 • Nov 15 Periodic properties Ch. 10 • Nov 17 Periodic properties Ch. 10 • Nov 19 Valence-bond; Lewis structures Ch. 11 • Nov 22 Hybrid orbitals; VSEPR Ch. 11, 12 • Nov 24 VSEPR Ch. 12 • Nov 26 MO theory Ch. 12 • Nov 29 MO theory Ch. 12 • Dec 1 Putting it all together • Dec 2 Review for exam
The atmosphere • Made up of a mixture of gases (mainly N2 and O2) • Mole fractions of major gases (nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, argon) are pretty constant with altitude • “interesting stuff” involves tiny amounts of trace gases – ozone, oxides of nitrogen and sulfurand some others
Argon, Neon, Xenon … rare gases often used in “neon” lights
Atmospheric gases can be separated by distillation, since they have different boiling points N2 77 K O2 90 K Ar 87 K Ne 24 K CH4 111 K
Pressure profile of atmosphere Pressure drops almost exponentially with increasing altitude ... why?? Trop. Strat.
Temperature profile in the atmosphere stratosphere
T goes up p stays constant Therefore, density goes down • pV = nRT ideal gas law is “pretty good” (why??) • Sun warms Earth’s surface … p is constant, so (n / V) decreases … p = (n/V) RT
Warmer, less dense air rises and expands … • work done against the surroundings … • … internal energy is lost • …. Therefore the air parcel cools
Temperature profile in the atmosphere stratosphere
The warming that happens through the stratosphere is due to chemical reactions which release heat … exothermic • These reactions involve ozone chemistry: O2 + UV light O + O heat released O + O2 + M O3 + Mheat released (M is required to remove excess energy) O + O3 2 O2 heat released O3 + UV light O2 + Oheat released
Outer space Heating due to Ionic reactions Cooling again
Aurora borealis: Northern lights are actually due to ions in the ionosphere reacting with charged particles from the solar wind
Equilibrium vapour pressure of water Relative humidity > 100% water condenses Relative humidity < 100% water evaporates
High altitude clouds (like cirrus clouds) are generally made of ice crystals Lower clouds (rain clouds!) are composed of liquid water droplets
Ozone in the atmosphere Most of the atmospheric ozone is in the stratosphere, in the “ozone layer”
Basic ozone chemistry: • O2 + UV light O + O heat released • O + O2 + M O3 + Mheat released • (M is required to remove excess energy) • O + O3 2 O2 heat released • O3 + UV light O2 + Oheat released • The ozone layer exists because of a balance between formation and destruction reactions
DH0f (O2) = …. DH0f (O3) = 142.7 kJ/mol DH0rxn = 2DH0f (O3) -3 DH0f (O2) = -285.4 kJ/mol
Ozone absorbs dangerous wavelengths of solar radiation in the stratosphere (where the ozone concentration is high) before it can reach the surface of the earth O3 + UV light O2 + O
These help to destroy ozone in the stratosphere Almost entirely from humans!
These chemical cycles are faster than the reactions which only involve oxygen species. They are most important in the Antarctic (and sometimes the Arctic) regions of the stratosphere, during the local springtime (late Sept-Nov in Antarctica)
Early spring Depleted ozone correlates with increased ClO
Toronto The decrease in ozone concentration in the stratosphere has resulted in an increase of the UV light which is no longer absorbed there
Up-to-the-minute newsbreak! What’s up with this year’s ozone hole? Go to http://jwocky.gsfc.nasa.gov/