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The Sulfur Cycle. The sulfur cycle is the collection of processes by which sulfur moves to and from minerals (including the waterways) and living systems. Sulfur. In nature: it can be found as the pure element, and as sulfide and sulfate minerals.
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The Sulfur Cycle The sulfur cycle is the collection of processes by which sulfur moves to and from minerals (including the waterways) and living systems.
Sulfur • In nature: it can be found as the pure element, and as sulfide and sulfate minerals. • Commercial uses: fertilizers, gunpowder, matches, insecticides, fungicides, vitamins, proteins and hormones. • It is critical in the environment, climate and the health of ecosystems. • Its the 10thmost abundant element in the universe and 7th most abundant element in our body. • Amino acids: Cystein and methionine
Biological importance • Amino acids: Methionine and Cysteine • Therefore important part of proteins, enzymes etc. • Vitamins
WHERE is sulfur found? • The majority of Earth's sulfur is stored: • In rocks underground! • In sulfur salts at the bottom of the ocean!
Sulfur Cycle • In ground: most found in rocks, or salt in earth, or as sediment at bottom of ocean • Found as S, H2S, SO4-2, (NH4)2SO4 • Enter ground: Plants absorb, or left by acid deposition (fog or precipitation) • As SO4-2, (NH4)2SO4, and then turn H2S by bacteria, decay, and plant use • Stored: Ground, rock, ocean, somewhat in air
Sulfur Cycle • Sulfur is transferred into biosphere then back into ground, or from ground to atmosphere • Microorganisms turn it into H2S (gas) • Oxidized in atmosphere to SO2, and then to H2SO4 (an acid) with water contact • Mined ores released to atmosphere in factories as H2S and SO2 • Volcanoes and hot springs
Sulfur Cycle • Deposited next in water • Through precipitation, dry deposition, leaching • Rainfall= deposited 73E12 grams sulfur in 1960 • SO4-2 leaches from soil into ocean as sediment • H2SO4 falls into ocean • Dimethyl Sulfide, carbonyl sulfide (biogenic gases), released by plankton returns back into atmosphere (turns into SO2) • Either re-evaporated, left as sediment for long time, or deposited on land • 20E12 grams of sulfur a year deposited on land by sea • When back on land, cycle repeats
The Atmospheric Portion • Volcanic eruptions, breakdown of organic matter in swamps and tidal flats, and the evaporation of water, especially seawater, release sulfur directly into the atmosphere. • Sulfur eventually settles to earth or comes down with rainfall.
Driving Force • Driven by: • constant addition of sulfur to environment by earths interior (geosphere) • Human disturbance, addition of sulfur to atmosphere, (also dug up from environment) • Natural processes (incl. Biological, hydrological, due to sun energy) • Plant uptake, microbes (Desulfovibrio sp. or Desulfotomaculum sp.)
Biochemicaltransformations • Physical Weathering release of sulfides (HS-) or sulfates (SO4-3) from minerals • Biological transformations: • Aerobic • sulfur-oxidizing bacteria ; sulfides are converted to sulfate (SO4-2) sulfate is assimilated by plants and microbes • Anaerobic • sulfate-reducing bacteria; sulfate converted to sulfides • Aerobic or anaerobic • Mineralization of organic S, release as either HS- or SO4-2
Human Activities • The burning of fossil fuels and processing of metals releases huge quantities of sulfur into the atmosphere. • Human activities are responsible for one-third of all sulfur emissions and 90% of all sulfur dioxide emissions. • Sulfur dioxide emissions lead to acid rain as sulfur dioxide reacts with water to form H2SO4 and sulfur trioxide reacts with water to form H2SO4.
Human Effect • When mine ores, sulfur/sulfides released into soil • Combustion of fossil fuels • Release of SO2, causes acid rain, increases amount already present • 28% of sulfur in rivers from pollution, mining, erosion, etc. • Help move cycle but also upset balance- too much S means acid rain • Hydrodesulphurization (refine hydrocarbons)- surplus of S
Conclusion • Sulfur Cycle is important to biological and natural processes although human’s role impacts nature in a negative way