The grime on city buildings and may actively contribute to urban air pollution. Christopher Intagliata reports.
ByIn recent years . But there’s still plenty of grime. Combustion from cars, factories and fires spews out nitrogen oxides. Those compounds react with sunlight and air to form ozone—the main ingredient in . And certain nitrogen oxides called nitrates—same stuff you find in fertilizer— also settle onto buildings and other city surfaces. Scientists figured that was the end of the story.
“Usually one thinks about pollutants such as nitrogen dioxide and nitrous acid as being lost from the atmosphere onto surfaces.” University of Toronto chemist in Boston on August 17th. “What we have been interested in is to see whether or not the influence of sunlight on urban grime material can in fact recycle these compounds and bring them back into active play in the atmosphere.” [D. James Donaldson et al, ]
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