7.5-7.8 Unit 7B Atmospheric Pollution ALL

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32 Terms

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Coal
A fossil fuel that forms underground from partially decomposed plant material, contains sulfur
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Combustion
the process of burning something
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Air pollution
Concentration of trace substances, such as carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, hydrocarbons, and solid particulates, at a greater level than occurs in average air
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PM 10
Particulates that are less than 10 microns in diameter. These particulates are present in the smoke created by burning wood.
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PM 2.5
particulates less than 2.5 microns, particles are capable of being inhaled deeply into the lungs, particles are not cleared readily from the body
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Nitrous oxides
NOX,Various gaseous compounds, including NO2 and NO3, which commonly result from industrial processes involving combustion.
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Acid deposition
Sulfur oxides and nitrogen oxides, emitted by burning fossil fuels, enter the atmosphere-where they combine with oxygen and water to form sulfuric acid and nitric acid-and return to Earth's surface
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Formaldehyde
An air pollutant that is a colorless chemical used to manufacture building materials and many household products, such as particleboard, hardwood plywood paneling, and urea-formaldehyde foam insulation.
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Respiratory
relating to the lungs
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Carbon monoxide
a colorless, odorless, and poisonous gas, bonds with hemoglobin getter than oxygen in the blood
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Asphyxiant
substance that can cause unconsciousness or death by suffocation
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Asbestos
A long, thin, fibrous silicate mineral with insulating properties, which can cause lung cancer when inhaled.
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indoor air pollution
Compounds that affect breathing that occur indoors. Examples: woodstove smoke, furnace emissions, formaldehyde, radon, household chemicals, tobacco smoke
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Radon
may cause damage to respiratory tissue when inhaled (lung cancer); is product of uranium decay and is an indoor pollutant, found in rocks/soil
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VOCs
Volatile organic compounds: Hydrocarbon solvents used in paints, stains and other products that are released into the air during the application of coatings and react with nitrous oxides and sunlight to form ozone.
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lead
Pb, impacts nervous system, kidney function, immune system, reproductive and developmental systems
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Sulfur oxide
(SOx) Primary source is coal burning. Primary and secondary effects include acid deposition, respiratory irritation, plant damage. Reduction methods include: scrubbers, burn low sulfur fuel.
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Particulates
Small particles released into the atmosphere by many natural processes and human activities
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Vapor recovery nozzle
reduces air pollution by capturing vapors that escape from a fuel tank
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Catalytic converter
device in vehicles that oxidizes most of the VOCs and some of the CO that would otherwise be emitted in exhaust, converting them to CO2.
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Wet scrubber
removes 98% SO2 and PM, fine mists of water vapor trap PM and convert to sludge that is disposed in landfill
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dry scrubber
Chemical reactions
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Removing SOx from a combustion gas
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Electrostatic precipitators
A device used for removing particulates from smokestack emissions. The charged particles are attracted to an oppositely charged metal plate, where they are precipitated out of the air.
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pH scale
scale with values from 0 to 14, used to measure the concentration of H+ ions in a solution; a pH of 0 to 7 is acidic, a pH of 7 is neutral, and a pH of 7 to 14 is basic
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Anthropogenic
Human-induced changes on the natural environment
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Acidification
The lowering of the pH of a solution.
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Limestone
a hard sedimentary rock, composed mainly of calcium carbonate or dolomite, used as building material and in the making of cement.
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calcium carbonate
CaCO3
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acid rain effects
corrodes metals and buildings, depletes fish populations, birds lay thin eggs, leach aluminum from soil, weaken forest ability to withstand cold
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Mitigation
the action of reducing the severity, seriousness, or painfulness of something
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Noise pollution
Any unwanted, disturbing, or harmful sound that impairs or interferes with hearing, causes stress, hampers concentration and work efficiency, or causes accidents.