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6. Atmospheric Photochemical Reactions
6.1 Introduction 6.2 Thermodynamics of photochemical reactions 6.3 Monatomic oxygen and ozone formation 6.4 Role of oxides of nitrogen in photo-oxidation 6-5. Hydrocarbons in atmospheric photochemistry 6-6 Hydrocarbon reactivity 6-7 Development of control strategies 6-8 Daily history of pollutants in photochemical smog
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6.1 Introduction Smog: arises from the interaction of sunlight with various constituents of the atmosphere characterized chemically by a relatively high level of oxidants. 자료출처 Reuter videos
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6.2 Thermodynamics of photochemical reactions
The energy of photon : frequency c:the speed of light Photochemical dissociation: Two-step process : excited state
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6.3 Monatomic oxygen and ozone formation
In the upper atmosphere :monoatomic oxygen in the ground state M: an energy-accepting third body an excited oxygen atom
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Ozone layer : acts as filter to ultraviolet radiation trying to reach the earth’s surface.
Image from NASA
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6.4 Role of oxides of nitrogen in photo-oxidation
1) Ozone formation near the earth’s surface fast reaction At steady state
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2) Nitric acid formation reaction
During the daytime During nighttime The rapid photolyzation of NO3 to NO and NO2 results in a reduction of NO3 to a very low concentration at dawn and during the daytime
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6-5. Hydrocarbons in atmospheric photochemistry
Radical: 쌍을 이루지 못한 전자를 갖고 있는 원자나 분자로 반응성이 큼 1) Hydroxyl radical (OH) The formation of the Hydroxyl radical Reaction with reactive VOCs The mechanism for increasing the Ozone concentration
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2) Peroxyacetyl nitrate (PANs) CH3CHO +OH-> CH3CO+H2O CH3CO+O2-> CH3C(O)O2 CH3C(O)O2+NO2+M↔CH3C(O)O2NO2+M In the upper troposphere PANs are quite stabel and can be transported long distances.
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Photolysis rate 𝑑[ 𝑂 2 ] 𝑑𝑡 = 𝑗 𝐴 [ 𝑂 3 ]
𝑗 𝐴 = 𝜆 1 𝜆 2 𝜎 𝐴 𝜆,𝑇 𝜙 𝐴 𝜆,𝑇 𝐼 𝜆 𝑑𝜆 𝜎 𝐴 : absorption cross section (cm2 molecule-1) 𝜙 𝐴 :quantum yield for photolysis rate 𝐼 𝜆 : spectral actnic flux (molecules cm-2 nm-1) Actnic flux: the radiant energy incident at a point from all direction The actnic flux for one hemisphere 𝐼 𝜆 ↓= 0 2𝜋 0 𝜋/2 𝐿 𝜆 𝑑𝜃𝑑𝜙 𝐿 𝜆 : radiance
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Chemical kinetics The rate of reaction is expressed in a form that accounts for both the frequency of collisions and the fraction that exceed the required energy. 𝑟=𝐴 𝑇 exp(− 𝐸 𝑅𝑇 ) 𝑐 𝑖 𝑐 𝑗 𝑘=𝐴 𝑇 exp(− 𝐸 𝑅𝑇 ) If 𝐴(𝑇) is independent of 𝑇, we have the Arrhenius form, 𝑘=𝐴 exp(− 𝐸 𝑅𝑇 ) 𝐸: Activation energy 𝑅: Universal gas constant
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6-6 Hydrocarbon reactivity
Incremental reactivity: the amount of ozone formed per unit amount of VOC added to a VOC mixture Incremental reactivity= : the function of ratio of VOC: NOx
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6-7 Development of control strategies
EKMA( empirical kinetic modeling approach) model : peak O3 concentration in ppm resulting from the irradiation of mixtures of VOCs and NOx at the initial concentration 1) NOx limited zone: VOC/NOx >8 the changes in the VOC concentration results in little to no change in ozone. Typical of suburban and rural areas 2)VOC limited zone : VOC/NOX <8 Decreasing the VOC concentration is effective control strategy Typical of polluted air EKMA approach provides a 1-day simulation episode but is severely limited in its ability to predict multi-day episodes. => transport should be considered
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6-8 Daily history of pollutants in photochemical smog
Hydrocarbon concentration: a peak 8 a.m. due to increased traffic. CO and NO: a peak at early morning due to increased traffic Ozone is formed as a result of photolysis of NO2 => NO2 decreases and O3 increases O3 concentration has a peak in the afternoon.
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