Pakistan Institute of Engineering and Applied Sciences Radiation Safety and Radioactive Waste Management Course
Pakistan Institute of Engineering and Applied Sciences Radiation Safety and Radioactive Waste Management Course
z)
P(z)
z
W = mg
= (
A g dz)
A
Figure: 2
dz g dP
g
dz
dP
Eq(1)
To a good approximation air can be taken as an ideal gas,
and as derived in Box I we can put the value of from
Eq.(1)
Using first law of thermodynamics, we can find the value of
L.H.S [Box- II]. Substituting the value of dP/P from eq(3)
in eq(2):
is the adiabatic lapse rate which an
air parcel would follow when it
moves in the atmosphere.
Taking g=9.8 m/s
2
, M=29 g/mole or 0.029 kg/mole, Cp as 3.5R i.e. 3.5(8.314) J/mole-
o
C, the adiabatic lapse rate for a
rising air parcel would be about 10
o
C/km.
Fluctuations in prevailing lapse rate:
Lecture delivered by Dr. Naseem Irfan
iii of vii
g
T R
M P
dz
dP
) 2 ( Eq dz
T R
g M
P
dP
dz
T R
g M
T
dT
R
C
p
p
C
g M
dz
dT
dz
dT
Box: I
Box: II
Refresher (Gas Law):
T R PV n
T R
M
m
PV
,
_
T R
V
m
PM
,
_
( ) T R PM
( )
T R
M P
-----Eq.(1)
Refresher (Thermodynamics):
PdV dQ + dU
For reversible adiabatic process dQ=0, therefore:
0 dU + PdV
0 PdV C n
v
+ dT
since P V = n R T => PdV + VdP = n R dT :.
( ) 0 n C n
p
+ VdP dT R dT R
since P V = n R T => V = ( n R T) / P :.
( ) 0 n C n
p
1
]
1
+ dP
P
T R n
dT R dT R
T R n
P
dP
dT C
p
1
]
1
n
1
]
1
P
dP
T
dT
R
C
p
-----Eq.(3)
In order to have a clear concept of Prevailing Lapse Rate and its dependence on the prevailing environmental
conditions, an example may be considered, of a day in Thar desert. It is assumed that this is a typical spring day,
which is dry enough that moisture plays no role, there are no clouds and winds are light or moderate.
Consider the curve in Figure 3, the solid line AB shows the situation at dawn. All night the ground surface has been
cooling, and at dawn the surface temperature is perhaps 25
o
C. The cooled layer nearest the ground cools the layer of
air above it, so that there is a steady flow of heat downward from the air to the ground by conduction, slight convection
and radiation. Thus at dawn, temperature increases with elevation up to perhaps 300m. At this altitude the cooling
wave from ground runs into the lapse rate left over from the previous day, and the temperature continues along up the
standard lapse rate of 6.5
o
C/km. Below 300m the temperature increases with height. This pattern is called an
inversion; such inversion occurs every clear or slightly cloudy night, with low or average winds, on most of the
worlds surface and is known as radiation inversion.
When sun comes up, it heats the ground surface, which heats the layer above it. The layer heats the next layer above
it, and so on. Two hours after dawn the ground temperature will be perhaps 30
o
C. There will be a layer of warmed air
near the ground, in which the lapse rate is practically the adiabatic lapse rate as air parcels are being heated and going
up shown by the dashed segment CD. At its top D this layer encounters the remainder of the previous nights
inversion. Rising air from below cannot penetrate that inversion, but at the boundary it mixes with the inversion,
slowly destroying it, so that by four hours after sunrise the warmed air layer has grown as shown by dashed line EF
and almost eliminated the inversion.
By mid afternoon, enough heat has been transferred from the warmed ground surface to the adjacent air that the
inversion is gone. The heated air, which now has an adiabatic lapse rate, extends to perhaps 1800m as shown by curve
GHI where it encounters with a lapse rate at or near that of standard atmosphere. In the few hundred feet closest to
ground the lapse rate is even greater than the adiabatic lapse rate. (i.e. super adiabatic ) as shown by the part GH of
curve GHI. Shortly after sunset, the ground surface begins to cool by radiation, and to cool the air layer nearest it. By
sunset there will be a weak inversion close to the ground. All night this inversion layer will grow in strength and size,
until by dawn next day the temperature profile will be the same as that for dawn. Thus the prevailing lapse rate in the
lower troposphere may assume any form depending upon prevailing atmospheric condition and heating and cooling of
the earth surface [Fig:4]. It may be superadiabatic if lapse rate exceeds adiabatic lapse rate. If it is less than
adiabatic lapse rate it would be subadiabatic. If air temperature is constant throughout the lower layers of
atmosphere, the ambient lapse rate is zero and is described as isothermal. When temperature of the ambient air
increases instead of decreasing with altitude the lapse rate is negative, or inverted compared to standard, this condition
is called inversion.
Lecture delivered by Dr. Naseem Irfan
iv of vii
Lecture delivered by Dr. Naseem Irfan
v of vii
10
o
C 15 20 25 30 35 40 45
o
C
300
0 m
600
900
1200
1500
1800
2100m
TEMPERATURE
Figure: 3. Vertical temperature distribution at various times on a cloudless day
with low or average winds in a dry climate.
STANDARD ATMOSPHERIC LAPSE RATE = -6.5
o
C/km
ADIABETIC LAPSE RATE = -9.8
o
C/km
DAWN
DAWN + 2h
DAWN + 4h
MIDAFTERNOON
Altitude (km)
1.5 _
Subadiabatic Isothermal Inversion
(stable) (stable) (stable)
1.0 _Dry Adiabatic
(Neutral)
0.5 _
Super-adiabatic
(unstable)
(T-9.8
o
C) Temperature, (
o
C)
Figure:4 Possible prevailing environmental conditions
Atmospheric Stability:
The condition of the atmospheric environment, based on which one can predict how a puff of smoke emanating from a
stack moves around and disperses is termed as atmospheric stability condition. The vertical and horizontal motions in
the atmosphere interacts; the horizontal flows are driven by rising air at the equator and sinking air at the poles. In
the atmosphere any parcel of air that is less dense than the surrounding air will sink by negative buoyancy. Most
vertical motions in the atmosphere are caused by changes in air density.
The comparison of Prevailing Lapse Rate and Adiabatic cooling of rising air parcel is the principal determinant of
atmospheric stability. Figure 5 shows three lapse rates i.e. an adiabatic, a superadiabatic, and a subadiabatic curve.
All passing through point A. Initially it may be supposed that parcel of air is at point A. If it is displaced upward
or downward in a reversible and adiabatic way; the parcel will always follow the adiabatic lapse rate going from (To,
Zo ) to (To t T , Zo t Z).
Stable Atmosphere:
The stable condition in usual sense implies a situation where an object, if disturbed, has a tendency to regain its
original position. e.g. a ball inside a bowl. A stable atmosphere corresponds to that situation in which if a puff of
smoke released in the atmosphere is perturbed up or down, it would resist and tends to restore its original position. In
atmosphere this happens when prevailing lapse rate is below adiabatic lapse rate i.e. either subadiabatic or in
inversion.
The concept can be confirmed by considering the behaviour of air parcel in this situation. If an air parcel is perturbed
upward it follows adiabatic curve. The surrounding air has a prevailing subadiabatic lapse rate. In moving up the air
parcel will do some work and cools down more quickly at an adiabatic cooling rate i.e. 9.8
o
C/km in comparison to
surrounding which are at relatively higher temperature. Thus it becomes colder and denser than the surrounding air
and density difference will drive it back downwards. Similarly if the air parcel is displaced downwards, following the
same logic, it will become warmer and less dense than the surrounding air and density gradient will drive it back up.
Whatever disturbs its location, density gradient will move it back towards original location. Thus if surrounding air
lapse rate (i.e. prevailing lapse rate) is subadiabatic or inverted, atmospheric condition would be termed as stable and
vertical air motion is inhibited.
This stability as described above can be understood more easily by using some numbers. Considering figure 6, which
shows the prevailing lapse rate to be 5
o
C per 1000m. Under this condition, when the atmosphere at the surface has a
temperature of 25
o
C, the atmosphere at 1000m will be 5
o
C cooler (i.e. 20
o
C), whereas the air at 2000m will have a
temperature of 15
o
C, and so forth. Now if an unsaturated air parcel having temperature of 25
o
C near the ground, were
to rise to 1000m, it would expand and cool at the dry adiabatic rate of 10
o
C/km. Therefore, on reaching 1000m, its
temperature would have dropped by 10
o
C and becomes 15
o
C. Now at 1000m, air parcel has a temperature of 15
o
C
whereas surrounding atmosphere at 1000m has a temperature of 20
o
C making air parcel 5
o
C cooler than its
environment, it would be heavier and would tend to sink to its original position. In other words one may say that
when atmosphere near the ground is potentially cooler than the atmosphere aloft, the smoke puff will not rise. By
similar reasoning, if the air parcel at 1000m subsides, adiabatic heating would increase its temperature10
o
C by the
time it reached the near ground, making it warmer than the surrounding air; thus its buoyancy would cause it to
return. Thus the atmosphere in which prevailing lapse rate is subadiabatic, or inversion exists, the atmosphere is
termed as stable and resists vertical movement of smoke.
Lecture delivered by Dr. Naseem Irfan
vi of vii
Similar thoughts can be given to other states of prevailing lapse rate like adiabatic, superadiabatic, isothermal and
inversion conditions. A simple procedure is to follow the steps given below to assess the stability. Practice can be done
on figure: 5 for all prevailing conditions using the steps below.
1. Place point A of the two intersecting curves ( i.e. adiabatic lapse rate which is followed by rising air parcel,
and prevailing lapse rate that exist in ambient environment )on the puff of smoke.
2. Draw horizontal lines parallel to temperature axis above and below A. These will intersect the two lapse rate
curves at two points on the same altitude.
3. Draw vertical lines through each point of intersection, which gives the corresponding temperature that exist
within air parcel and the temperature of the surrounding air, above and below the smoke puff.
4. The density of each is inversely related to their temperature and by having an idea of density the tendency of
smoke puff to move in the atmosphere can be assessed.
5. Only three cases are possible, although they may vary from slight to moderate.
a) Stable Atmosphere (tendency to move back to original position, vertical movement is not supported by
the environment), e.g. that exist in a clear night.
b) Neutral Atmosphere (tendency to remain stationary at the new position if air parcel is displaced), e.g
that exist in an overcast day.
c) Unstable Atmosphere (tendency to continue its movement in the direction in which it is pushed either
upward or downward) e.g. that exist in a warm sunny day.
Lecture delivered by Dr. Naseem Irfan
vii of vii
Subadiabatic Isothermal Inversion
(stable) (stable) (stable)
Dry Adiabatic
(Neutral)
Super-adiabatic
(unstable)
Figure:5 Behaviour of an air parcel displaced up or down in an
atmosphere with an adiabatic and a subadiabatic lapse rate.
Temperature, (
o
C)
Environmental Lapse
rate 5
o
C/km
2000 m-( 15
o
C)
1000m 20
o
C
ground 25
o
C
15
o
C
5
o
C
Tendency
Tendency
Force
dupwar
d
25
o
C
Puff of smoke
or air parcel
Figure:6 Schematic representation of a stable atmosphere.
Note that the air near the surface is potentially cooler
than air aloft and therefore resist upward motion.