Chemistry > Enviromental Chemistry > 6.0 Stratospherical Pollution: (Ozone Layer & its depletion)
Enviromental Chemistry
1.0 Introduction
2.0 Environmental Pollution
2.1 Pollutant
2.2 Contaminant
2.3 Source
2.4 Sink
2.5 Receptor
2.6 Threshold limit value (TLV)
2.7 Flow sheet of Environmental pollution process
2.8 Atmospheric Pollution
2.9 Tropospheric pollution or Air pollution
3.0 Types Of Pollution
3.1 Primary pollutants
3.2 Particulate Matter
3.3 Inorganic gases
3.4 Secondary Pollutants
3.5 Major air pollutants
4.0 Particulates
5.0 Control Of Air Pollution
6.0 Stratospherical Pollution: (Ozone Layer & its depletion)
7.0 Acid Rain
8.0 Green House Effect & Global Warming
8.1 Green house effect around the earth
8.2 Advantages of green house effect
8.3 Harmful effects of green house effect
8.4 Water Pollution
9.0 BOD Determination
10.0 COD determination
10.1 Control of water pollution
10.2 Land Pollution
10.3 Pesticides
10.4 Control of soil pollution
10.5 Green Chemistry: A new route to protection of environment
6.1 Role of Ozone Layer
2.2 Contaminant
2.3 Source
2.4 Sink
2.5 Receptor
2.6 Threshold limit value (TLV)
2.7 Flow sheet of Environmental pollution process
2.8 Atmospheric Pollution
2.9 Tropospheric pollution or Air pollution
3.2 Particulate Matter
3.3 Inorganic gases
3.4 Secondary Pollutants
3.5 Major air pollutants
8.2 Advantages of green house effect
8.3 Harmful effects of green house effect
8.4 Water Pollution
10.2 Land Pollution
10.3 Pesticides
10.4 Control of soil pollution
10.5 Green Chemistry: A new route to protection of environment
The stratosphere or ozonosphere plays a significant role in protecting earth from the UV radiation coming from the sun. Ozone absorbs UV radiation & prevent most of them in reaching the earth’s surface.
Ozone is simultaneously being formed & destroyed by naturally occupying chemical reactions.