Air Quality, Pollution and Control
Air Quality, Pollution and Control
Air Quality, Pollution and Control
•
Pure air is described as a mixture of the following gases:
78.0% N2, 20.1% O2, 0.9% Ar, 0.03% CO2, 0.002% Ne, 0.005% He plus other gases. Such pure air does not exist but it serves
as a reference for clean air.
4 MAJOR LAYERS OF THE EARTH’S ATMOSPHERE
1) Troposphere (contains more than 80% air)
2) Stratosphere (contains 90% ozone)
3) Mesosphere
4) Thermosphere
I. PARTICULATES
a) Dust (100µ) – solid particles created by the breakup of larger masses through processing or handling of materials such
as coal, ash, cement, grains by crushing or grinding.
- direct offspring of a parent material undergoing mechanical operation (sawdust from wood works)
- entrained materials used in mechanical operations (sand blasting)
- natural phenomena (volcanic eruption)
b) Fume (0.03 – 0.3µ) – a solid particle frequently a metallic oxide formed by the condensation of vapors by sublimation,
distillation, calcinations, or chemical reaction processes.
ex. Zinc and lead oxides from oxidation and condensation
c) Mist (0.5 – 3.0µ) – an entrained liquid particle formed by the condensation of a vapor, dispersion of a liquid (as foaming
or splashing) and by chemical reaction (formation of sulfuric acid mists)
- Mist is also called fog when its concentration is high enough to obscure visibility.
d) Smoke (0.05 – 1.0µ) – entrained solid particles formed as a result of incomplete combustion of carbonaceous materials
(wood, coal, tobacco, other combustibles)
e) Spray (10 – 1000µ) – a liquid particle formed by the atomization of a parent liquid, settles out by gravity
f) Fly ash – consists of finely divided, non – combustible particles contained in flue gases arising from combustion of coal
and other combustibles.
MEASUREMENT OF PARTICULATES
a) Measurement of Total Suspended Particulates (TSP)
- High – volume sampler is used which operates like a vacuum cleaner by simply forcing more than 2000 m 3 of
air through a filter for 24 hours
- Analysis is gravimetric and the air flow is measured by small flow meter (calibrated in ft 3/min)
b) Measurement of Respirable Particulates (particulates < 0.3µ)
- Measurement done in relation to health
c) Measurement of PM10 : Particulate Matter less than 10 microns
- A measure used in ambient air quality standards
Photochemical Smog
Two Most Destructive Formed:
1) Ozone, O3 – destroys chlorophyll and injures the lung tissue, can damage rubber such as tires.
2) Peroxyacetylnitrates – eye irritants. These are excellent oxidizing agents, they react readily with many other compounds
causing destructive damage.
Other Classification of Air Pollutants
a) Criteria Pollutants – emissions to the urban air traditionally sees as polluting: NOx, CO, SOx, PM10, VOC, HC, O3, Pb
b) Non - criteria Pollutants – pollutants whose emissions are set
C6H6, C7H8, CS2, VC, PAH (polynuclear aromatic HC’s), Arsenic, Asbestos, TCDD (2,3,7,7 tetrachloro – dibenzon – p – dioxin)
CONTROL OF PARTICULATES
1) Settling chambers – consist of wide places in the exhaust flue where large particles can settle out, usually with baffle to
slow the emission stream. Only particulates > 100 µm can be removed.
2) Cyclones – most effective means of controlling particulates. The dirty air is blasted into a conical cylinder but off center line.
This creates a violent swirl within the cone and the heavy solids migrate to the wall of the cylinder where they slow down
due to friction, slide down the cone and finally exit at the bottom. The clean air is in the middle of the cylinder and exits out
at the top.
3) Bag filters (fabric filters) – operate like the common vacuum cleaner. They are used to collect dust then removed from the
bag. This filter can remove submicron sizes of particulates but are sensitive to high temperature and humidity. Filter bags
are widely used in many industrial applications. The dust particles adhere to the fabric due to entrapment and surface
forces.
Air Quality, Pollution and Control
4) Spray Tower or scrubber – effective for removing large particulates. Drawbacks include producing visible plume, albeit only
water vapor. The waste is converted to liquid which needs treatment.
5) Electrostatic Precipitators (ESP) – widely used in power plants, because power is readily available. The particulates are first
charged by electrons jumping from one high – voltage electrode to the other and then migrating to the positively charge
collecting electrode. Effective in removing submicron particles
2) Adsorption – used when it is possible to bring the pollutant into contact with an adsorber like activated carbon.
3) Incineration or Flaring – used when organic pollutant can be oxidized to CO2 and water, catalytic combustion.
Air Quality, Pollution and Control
CONTROL OF SOx
1) Change to low sulfur fuel (coal to natural gas, more expensive)
2) Desulfurize the coal
3) Tall stacks to disperse SO2
4) Flue gas desulfurization – reduce SO2 emitted by cleaning the gases coming from the combustion process
DISPERSION OF POLLUTANTS
• Dispersion is the process of spreading out the emission over a large area and thereby reducing the concentration of the
specific pollutants. Dispersion is in two dimensions: horizontal or vertical. The amount of dispersion is directly related to the
stability of the air, or how much vertical air movement is taking place.