RI 2128 Sulphur Dioxide as Factor in Smoke Problem, Salt Lake City

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
G. St John Perrott
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
6
File Size:
362 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 1920

Abstract

"The United States Bureau of Mines is cooperating with the State of Utah and the City of Salt Lake in an investigation of methods of abating the smoke nuisance in Salt Lake City. In the course of this work samples of the atmosphere have been collected and analyzed in an attempt to determine the part played by sulphur dioxide or smelter gases in polluting the air at Salt Lake City.A fairly wide-spread opinion exists in Salt Lake City that the smelters contribute appreciably to the smoke nuisance. The gases discharged from the smelter stacks are believed (1) to float over the city in a heavy blanket which prevents the smoke from rising, and (2) to unite with the water vapor in the air to form corrosive fogs injurious to health and property.The first of these theories seems untenable. If the gas did not mix with air it would sink, owing to its heavier specific gravity, and form a blanket an the earth. Actually, the gas diffuses rapidly in air and any part reaching Salt Take must he thoroughly diluted. Perhaps sulphur dioxide in sufficient concentration might aid in fog formation. The more obvious nuisance, however, would be the injury to health and vegetation.The Garfield smelter is 16 miles west of the city, The Murray smelter 8 miles south, and the Midvale smelter 12 miles south. Under normal operating conditions, a relatively small amount of solid matter is discharged from these stacks. The toxic gaseous constituent of the discharge is sulphur dioxide, it is being discharged from the smelters the year round. If they are a factor in the city's smoke problem, the concentration of this gas in the air of the city should be appreciable and should increase toward the smelters, the con centration being highest with a south or a west wind."
Citation

APA: G. St John Perrott  (1920)  RI 2128 Sulphur Dioxide as Factor in Smoke Problem, Salt Lake City

MLA: G. St John Perrott RI 2128 Sulphur Dioxide as Factor in Smoke Problem, Salt Lake City. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1920.

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