In the 1980s, research focused on ‘acid rain’, especially in the light of SO 2 and NO x emissions with only a few researchers at that time examining the possible effects of NH 3 and ammonium ( N H 4 + ) on the environment, including threats to soils, biodiversity and forest health. Over recent decades ammonia (NH 3) has often seemed like the Cinderella of air pollution, as it has been given much less attention than other pollutants, such as sulfur dioxide (SO 2), nitrogen oxides (NO x), ozone (O 3) and particulate matter (PM). This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Air quality, past present and future’. Progress is likely to be mobilized by emphasizing the lost economic value of global N emissions ($200 billion yr −1), as part of developing the circular economy for sustainable nitrogen management. It is concluded that future air pollution policy should no longer neglect ammonia. Investigations of epiphytic lichens and bog ecosystems show how the alkalinity effect of NH 3 may explain its having three to five times the adverse effect of ammonium and nitrate, respectively. Successful control of acidifying SO 2 and NO x emissions leaves atmospheric NH 3 in excess in many areas, contributing to particulate matter (PM 2.5) formation, while leading to a new significance of alkaline air, with adverse impacts on natural ecosystems. The same economic, chemical and environmental properties are found to make ammonia and ammonium of huge relevance today. Ammonia was one of the keys to alchemy-seen as an early experimental mesocosm to understand the world-and later became of interest as ‘alkaline air’ within the eighteenth century development of pneumatic chemistry. Sal ammoniac ( nūshādir, nao sha) is found to have been extremely valuable in long-distance trade ( ca AD 600–1150) from Egypt and China, where 6–8 kg N could purchase a human life, while air pollution associated with nūshādir collection was attributed to this nitrogen form. By contrast, these compounds have been of significant past interest to science and society, the recollection of which can inform future strategies. Ammonia and ammonium have received less attention than other forms of air pollution, with limited progress in controlling emissions at UK, European and global scales.
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