What is a pollutant?
A substance or energy introduced into the environment that has undesired effects, or adversely affects the usefulness of a resource.
- Can be naturally forming or anthropogenic forming.
Examples of gaseous pollutants:
Examples of liquid pollutants:
Examples of solid pollutants:
Examples of energy pollutants:
How does the density of a pollutant affect pollution?
The denser the particles of solid the closer to the source they settle.
In gases denser air sinks nearer source
In liquid denser particles sink more quickly
How does the source of pollution affect the pollution caused?
Point of source - from a definite place has a definite effect e.g. oil spills from a tanker
Diffuse source - from many sources with combined impacts e.g. car exhausts
How does persistence/degradability affect pollution?
What are POPs and what has been done to reduce them?
What are the effects of POPs?
How does toxicity affect pollution?
And what is an example of a persistent heavy metal?
Toxic chemicals = inhibit enzymes, damage the nervous system and damage organs.
E.g. lead. It is a neurotoxin, accumulates in soft tissues and bones, causes blood and brain disorders
How does chemical reactivity affect pollution?
What are PANs?
How are they mad?
What issues do they cause?
Peroxy Acetyl Nitrates
- Made from NOx from car exhausts and oxygen in the air and unborn hydrocarbons
- Reacts in sunlight to make PANs
- Toxic and irritating to eyes, lungs and plants
How does specificity affect pollution?
And an example?
How does adsorption affect pollution?
What’s the problem?
When molecules stick onto the outside of another particle
E.g. pollutants sticking to soil particles
PROBLEM: they can be releases later on
Examples of adsorbents?
How does solubility in water/lipids affect pollution?
How does mobility affect pollution?
Mobility is the measure of the degree to which the pollutant is carried by wind, water or organisms.
E.g. smoke, acid rain, CFCs, PCBs
What is bioaccumulation and how does it affect pollution?
What is biomagnification and how does it affect pollution?
It is the increase in concentration as a pollutant passes along a food chain, up the tropic levels.
E.g. heavy metals, chlorinated organic compounds, the chlorine makes them resistant to degradation.
What is synergism and how does it affect pollution?
And what is an example of this?
What is mutagenic action and how does it affect pollution?
What is carcinogenic action?
What is teratogenic action?