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Introduction. Air pollution worldwide is a growing threat to human health and the natural environment Air pollution may be described as contamination of the atmosphere by gaseous, liquid, or solid wastes or by-products that can endanger life, attack materials and reduce visibility
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Introduction • Air pollution worldwide is a growing threat to human health and the natural environment • Air pollution may be described as contamination of the atmosphere by gaseous, liquid, or solid wastes or by-products that can endanger life, attack materials and reduce visibility • Some of the questions which might come to mind while thinking about pollution are: • Are we doing something about solving these problems? • Do we know enough about the conditions under which a pollution episode occurs? • What are the regulations? • How to control emissions?
Sources Of Air Pollutants • Natural Sources • Volcanoes • Coniferous forests • Forest fires • Pollens • Spores • Dust storms • Hot springs • Man-made Sources • Fuel combustion - Largest contributor • Chemical plants • Motor vehicles • Power and heat generators • Waste disposal sites • Operation of internal-combustion engines
Ambient Air • The air all around us
Should We Worry About Air Pollution ? • Air pollution affects every one of us • Air pollution can cause health problems and in an extreme case • even death • Air pollution reduces crop yields and affects animal life • Air pollution can soil and corrode materials, and monuments • Air pollution can cause significant economic losses
Accidents and Episodes • 1930 -3 day fog in Meuse Valley, Belgium • 1931 -9 day fog in Manchester, England • 1948 -Plant emissions in Donora, Penn, USA • 1952 -4 day fog in London • 1970 -Radionuclide emissions, Three Mile Island, USA • 1984 -Release of Methyl isocynate in Bhopal, India • 1986 -Radionuclide releases, Chernobyl, Ukraine
Air Quality • Indoor • Radon • Combustion by-products • CO, CO2, SO2, Formaldehyde, Hydrocarbons, NOx, • Particulates, Polyaromatic hydrocarbons • Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS) • Volatile organic compounds • Formaldehyde • Biological contaminants • Pesticides • Outdoor • SO2 • CO, CO2 • NO2 • Ozone • TSP • Pb • Toxic pollutants
Definition of an Air Pollutant • A contaminant that affects human life, plant life, animal life and property or a contaminant which interferes with the enjoyment of life and property is an air pollutant • Ohio EPA provides a definition of "Air pollutant" or"air contaminant “as particulate matter, dust, fumes, gas, mist, smoke, vapor, or odorous substances.
How to define an air pollutant ? • Basis: Chemicals present in the environment • Process: • Use composition of the clean air used as a bench mark. • When the concentration of a chemical is above the concentration of the chemical present in air, it is termed as an air pollutant
Physical Forms of Air Pollutants • Gaseous form • Sulfur dioxide • Ozone • Hydro-carbon vapors • Particulate form • Smoke • Dust • Fly ash • Mists
Classification of Pollutants • Primary pollutants: remain in the same chemical form, as they are released from a source directly into the atmosphere. • Sulfur dioxide • Hydrocarbons • Secondary pollutants: are a result of chemical reaction among two or more pollutants. • PAN
Common Air Pollutants • Sulfur Dioxide • Hydrocarbons • Ozone • Total Suspended Particulate Matter/Fine Particulates • Nitrogen Oxides • Carbon Monoxide • Lead • Carbon Dioxide
Toxic Air Pollutants • Toxic air pollutants may originate from natural sources as well as from manmade sources such as stationary and mobile sources • The stationary sources like factories and refineries serve as major contributors to air pollution • The Clean Air Act of 1990 provides a list of 189 chemicals to be regulated under the hazardous air pollutant provisions of the act (See EPA site for current list chemicals)
Source Classification Sources may be classified as: (A) Primary Secondary (B) Combustion Non-combustion (C) Stationary Mobile (D) Point:These sources include facilities that emit sufficient amounts of pollutants worth listing Area: all other point sources that individually emit a small amount of pollutants are considered as area sources Natural (biogenic)
Source Classification • (E) Classification for reporting air emissions to the public: • Transportation sources: Includes emissions from transportation sources during the combustion process • Stationary combustion sources: These sources produce only energy and the emission is a result of fuel combustion • Industrial sources: These sources emit pollutants during the manufacturing of products • Solid waste Disposal:Includes facilities that dispose off unwanted trash • Miscellaneous: sources that do no fit in any of the above c categories like forest fires, coal mining etc.
Air Pollution Index • Air pollution indices were introduced to translate technical information on concentration levels of various pollutants into a simple and easy to understand language for the public • The U.S.E.P.A has developed the pollutant standard index (PSI) for introducing consistency in providing information regarding the air quality throughout the U.S. The system is based on a scale of 0-500 • Index Value is assigned based on the amount of air pollutants in the air and associated health effect
Development of an Emission Inventory • Emission Inventory is a study of the pollutant emissions from sources in a given area • Emission Inventories have been developed by: • plant • local environmental agency • national environmental agency • Details for development of an emission inventory depend on: • area of coverage • nature of sources • purpose • Well known emission inventories in US • Inventory of criteria pollutants • Toxic release inventory (TRI)
Steps to Develop Emission Inventory • Steps Involved in development of an emission inventory are: • Planning • Data Collection • Data Analysis • Reporting Data
Planning • Defines scope and purpose of inventory • Major points considered during this step are: • Pollutants to be enlisted in the inventory are specified along with the methods to collect or estimate data • Use of data and geographical area involved are determined • Legal authority and responsibility of specific groups to acquire data is considered along with an assessment of cost and resources
Data Collection • Steps to be taken: • Emissions are classified • Pollutant sources are located and classified • Quality and quantity of materials handled, processed, or burned is determined • Collection Methods: During this stage data may be collected by • Mail survey • Plant inspection • Field surveys • Data from literature: • Industrial files • Government files • Periodicals • Trade journals • Scientific publications
Information Collected during Data Collection • General source information - location, ownership, and nature of business • Activity levels - amount of fuel and materials (input) • Amount of production - output of the plant • Control device information - type of pollution control devices • Information required to estimate emissions - temperature, tank conditions, hours of operations, seasonal variation and other data
Data Analysis • Check accuracy • Calculation of emission rate is done using: • Monitoring data (most accurate & most expensive) • Emission factors from AP-42 , • Mass balance, and • Engineering calculation
Emission Rate • Emission rate is the weight of a pollutant emitted per unit time. • Emission factor is an estimate of the rate at which a pollutant is released into the atmosphere per unit level of activity • To calculate emission rate: EMISSION RATE = [INPUT] x [EMISSION FACTOR] x [APLICABLE CORRECTION FACTORS] x [HOURS OF OPERATION] x [SEASONAL VARIATION]
Reporting Data • Information can be filed with the following pollution control agencies: • Local • Regional • National • In US, data gathered by state agencies are reported to the USEPA • Emission data are available from the USEPA’s web site
Uses of an Emission Inventory • The Emission Inventory developed may be used for: • Identifying types of pollutants emitted from specific sources. • Determining the magnitude or amount of emissions from those sources • Developing the emissions distribution in time and space • Calculating emission rates under specific plant operating conditions • Finding out the relation of ambient air pollutant concentration with specific sources • Input data for air quality modeling and risk • Determine pollution control options for public health • Estimating cost based on emissions
Air Pollution in Asia • Asia represents a major source of air pollution as a result of rapid population growth, explosive industrialization, and few environmental regulations • China: • China is polluted with sulfur dioxide (15 million tons) and particulate matter (20 million tons) because of the use of the high sulfur coal used to generate energy. • Other Chemicals: • 1. Carbon Dioxide from Industry • 2. Greenhouse Gases from Industry • 3. Nitrogen Oxides from Cars • 4. Acid Rain • With all these problems China has very little air pollution control.
Air Pollution in Asia • India: • Most common air pollutant: suspended particulate matter is due to use of coal in power plants • Use of low quality coal produces 45 million metric tons of ash annually • When particulate matter ash is mixed with auto exhaust the emissions across limits resulting in an increase in respiratory diseases and allergies • South Korea: • SO2 is the major pollutant in South Korea, however, it is being controlled by using air pollution control equipment • Hong Kong: • Vehicular emissions contribute to air pollution problems with diesel powered engines being the prime culprit.
ppm and µg/m3 relationship where M is the molecular weight of the pollutant gas.