Title: | Ozone reaction with clothing and its initiated VOC emissions in an environmental chamber |
Author(s): | Rai AC; Guo B; Lin CH; Zhang J; Pei J; Chen Q; |
Address: | "School of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA" |
ISSN/ISBN: | 1600-0668 (Electronic) 0905-6947 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "Human health is adversely affected by ozone and the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) produced from its reactions in the indoor environment. Hence, it is important to characterize the ozone-initiated reactive chemistry under indoor conditions and study the influence of different factors on these reactions. This investigation studied the ozone reactions with clothing through a series of experiments conducted in an environmental chamber under various conditions. The study found that the ozone reactions with a soiled (human-worn) T-shirt consumed ozone and generated VOCs. The ozone removal rate and deposition velocity for the T-shirt increased with the increasing soiling level and air change rate, decreased at high ozone concentrations, and were relatively unaffected by the humidity. The deposition velocity for the soiled T-shirt ranged from 0.15 to 0.29 cm/s. The ozone-initiated VOC emissions included C6-C10 straight-chain saturated aldehydes, acetone, and 4-OPA (4-oxopentanal). The VOC emissions were generally higher at higher ozone, humidity, soiling of T-shirt, and air change rate. The total molar yield was approximately 0.5 in most cases, which means that for every two moles of ozone removed by the T-shirt surface, one mole of VOCs was produced" |
Keywords: | Adult Air Pollutants/*chemistry *Clothing Humans Male Ozone/*chemistry Volatile Organic Compounds/analysis/*chemistry Air quality Environmental factors Ozone Secondary emissions Skin oil Surface reactions Volatile organic compounds; |
Notes: | "MedlineRai, A C Guo, B Lin, C-H Zhang, J Pei, J Chen, Q eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't England 2013/07/12 Indoor Air. 2014 Feb; 24(1):49-58. doi: 10.1111/ina.12058. Epub 2013 Aug 9" |