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17.2I: Ozone

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    Ozone is a highly active form of oxygen (O3 rather than O2). Ozone is made when a electric spark passes through air, and this accounts for the characteristic odor give off by some electrical motors. Ozone presents two quite different biological problems: too much at low levels of the atmosphere (the troposphere); too little at high altitudes (the stratosphere).

    Ozone in the Troposphere

    Ozone is produced by the reaction of sunlight, oxygen, and automobile exhaust (which contains hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides). Ozone is largely responsible for the discomfort associated with photochemical smog. This form of smog, long familiar to people in the Los Angeles basin, is now common wherever sunlight and stagnant air occur in urban areas (Mexico City is a dramatic example with ozone levels that often exceed 100 ppb and sometimes rise above 350 ppb). High levels of ozone during smog build-up can cause difficulty to people with respiratory ailments like emphysema and asthma. Ozone also damages plants and may be an important factor in the damage that is occurring to forests in Europe and North America.

    Ozone in the Stratosphere

    While we often have too much ozone around us, the concentration of ozone high in the stratosphere (which begins about 7 miles [11 km] up — where airliners cruise) has declined over the past two decades. Satellite monitoring of the stratosphere, which began in 1978, has revealed a marked decline. The most serious decline occurs over Antarctica in spring (October) when a precipitous drop in ozone causes an ozone hole. The figure (courtesy of NASA) shows a map of the ozone hole measured over Antarctica on 5 October 1987 by a device carried on the Nimbus 7 satellite. The tips of South America (upper right quadrant ) and Africa (lower right) are drawn in, as is the outline of Australia and New Zealand (lower left).

    2019hole1.jpg
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Scientists from NASA and NOAA work together to track the ozone layer throughout the year and determine when the hole reaches its annual maximum extent. This year, unusually strong weather patterns caused warm temperatures in the upper atmosphere above the South Pole region of Antarctic, which resulted in a small ozone hole. Credits: NASA Goddard/ Katy Mersmann This video can be downloaded for free at NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio

    The Dobson unit is a measure of the number of molecules of ozone in a vertical column of the atmosphere. You can see that the concentration of ozone decreases in ever-smaller concentric circles with the lowest reading centered over the South Pole. Despite an anomalous increase in October 2015 (attributed to a volcanic eruption in Chile), the hole has been steadily shrinking over the last 14 years. This is probably the result of phasing out the manufacture and use of chlorofluorocarbons.

    The Ozone Shield

    The spreading of this ozone-depleted air may account for the more gradual and more protracted declines that are being seen at midlatitudes. From 1978-1990, average ozone levels declined 8% over Europe and about 5% over the United States. This is ominous because ozone shields the earth's surface from much of the ultraviolet radiation reaching the earth from the sun. Ultraviolet rays can cause skin cancer, cataracts, and may depress the immune system.

    alt
    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): O3_UVB

    The graph (from C. R. Roy, et. al., in Nature 347:235, 1990) shows measurements of the intensity of ultraviolet light and the concentration of ozone on several sunny days in Melbourne, Australia during December 1987 and January 1988. When ozone levels were low, ultraviolet light was more intense and vice versa. The drop in ozone, which lasted about a month, was probably caused by ozone-depleted air drifting in from the ozone hole over the South Pole. Most of the ultraviolet light that reaches the earth is ultraviolet "B" (UV-B), which includes wavelengths from 280 to 320 nm.

    Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)

    Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) are synthetic gases in which the hydrogen atoms of methane are replaced by atoms of fluorine and chlorine (e.g., CHF2Cl, CFCl3, CF2Cl2). These gases are noninflammable, nontoxic, and very stable. They were widely used in industry as refrigerants (e.g., in refrigerators and air conditioners), solvents, propellants in aerosol cans (now banned in some countries), and in the manufacture of plastic foams. CFCs escape to the air from all of these uses (e.g., from leaky and discarded refrigeration units). Their chemical inertness, which makes CFCs so desirable for industry, also makes them a threat to the atmosphere. Once in the atmosphere, it may take 60–100 years for them to decompose and disappear. In the meantime, they pose a threat to the ozone shield.

    Although some of the recent depletion of ozone in the stratosphere was probably due to natural causes (volcanic eruptions, fewer sunspots), some is most likely caused by chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). However, a multi-nation agreement drawn up in 1987 - the Montreal Protocol - established a schedule for reducing the use of these materials. And, in fact, monitoring shows that the concentration of CFCs in the stratosphere has been decreasing since the mid-90s.

    CFCs have largely been replaced by hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) in air conditioners and refrigerators. HFCs do not destroy ozone but are potent greenhouse gases. While the ozone hole over the Antarctic still persists, there are signs of recovery of ozone levels at mid-latitudes (where we live). Whether this trend continues may depend on the contribution to ozone-depletion by nitrous oxide.

    Contributors and Attributions


    This page titled 17.2I: Ozone is shared under a CC BY 3.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by John W. Kimball via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.

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