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Air Pollution is a Growing Concern for the WorldInvestigating Air Quality to Find Level of Environmental Pollution
The decline in the quality of air people breathe today is investigated by students to determine how smog is formed from carbon-based materials.
During the 2008 summer Olympics in Beijing, China, smog was such a concern that air pollution monitors where used to measure the amount of smog in the air during Olympic events. Even the news networks had their own smog monitors to include air pollution reports in their sports coverage. Air pollution, or smog, is growing problem in the world as the population of the planet continues to grow. Beijing is not the only large city with air pollution problems. Almost all large cities in the world deal with air pollution, typically called smog. Some cities have so much smog that they need to declare health alerts. This is when smog is so dense that it poses health problems for people who live in the city. Local television weather reports report health alerts using an Air Quality Index for their viewing area. Smog: What is it? Smog is the photochemical reaction between sunlight and industrial emissions and the burning of carbon-based materials. Smog is a mixture of photochemical pollutants, such as carbon dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, and sulfur dioxide. Smog is a mixture of highly reactive chemicals that leave airborne particles in the air, which are dangerous to people and the environment. These highly reactive chemicals mix with tiny water droplets in the air to form air pollution. Smog:
The following experiment allows students to use problem solving and science process skills as they investigate the burning of carbon-based materials. Materials (per group)
Procedures
Student Questions
One car pollutes the air with 4,500 lbs. of carbon dioxide (CO2), 160 pounds of carbon monoxide (CO), 16 lbs. of nitrogen oxide (NOx). See 20 questions to ask students in science projects for additional ideas about questions to ask students. Investigation Connections Smoke from the burning paper (carbon-based material) interacts with water droplets in the bottle to form smog. The water droplets are caused by water vapor (water in bottom and side of jar turns to vapor when heated by the burning paper) making contact with the aluminum foil cooled by the ice cubes (similar to water vapor in the air reaching earth’s cold upper atmosphere and condensing into water droplets). Making Connections with Environmental Air Pollution All of this smog contributes to air pollution in homes. Along with all the synthetic materials found in homes, air from the outside seeps into homes through windows, doors, and other cracks in poorly insulated or constructed homes. The indoor air quality in the average American home has declined over the past decades, which has lead to the push for green building and living around the world. Air pollution or smog, is a growing concern for everyone who lives on planet Earth.
The copyright of the article Air Pollution is a Growing Concern for the World in Curricula/Lesson Plans is owned by David R. Wetzel. Permission to republish Air Pollution is a Growing Concern for the World in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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