Answer:
Burning more sulfur-enriched coal in the eastern US would result in higher levels of acidity in rainfall.
Explanation:
Acid rain is a result mainly of the production of sulfur dioxide, SO₂, which accompanies the combustion of coal with high sulfur content in power generating plants. Sulfur dioxide is slowly converted into SO₃ by the reaction with oxygen in the air and its dissolution in rainwater, which produces diluted sulfuric acid, H₂SO₄.
First, the sulfur in coal is transformed into sulfur dioxide by the reaction with oxygen during burning:
S(s) + O₂ (g) ⇒ SO₂ (g)
Sulfur dioxide rises into the atmosphere and part of it oxidizes, becoming sulfur trioxide:
2 SO₂ (g) + O₂ (g) ⇒ 2 SO₃ (g)
Finally, sulfur dioxide and sulfur trioxide react with the water formed in the rains to form sulfurous acid and sulfuric acid respectively:
SO₂ (g) + H₂O (l) ⇒ H₂SO₃ (aq)
SO₃ (g) + H₂O (l) ⇒ H₂SO₄ (aq)