| Literature DB >> 26742024 |
Yu Huang1,2, Steven Sai Hang Ho3,4, Yanfeng Lu5, Ruiyuan Niu6, Lifeng Xu7, Junji Cao8,9, Shuncheng Lee10.
Abstract
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are ubiquitous in indoor environments. Inhalation of VOCs can cause irritation, difficulty breathing, and nausea, and damage the central nervous system as well as other organs. Formaldehyde is a particularly important VOC as it is even a carcinogen. Removal of VOCs is thus critical to control indoor air quality (IAQ). Photocatalytic oxidation has demonstrated feasibility to remove toxic VOCs and formaldehyde from indoor environments. The technique is highly-chemical stable, inexpensive, non-toxic, and capable of removing a wide variety of organics under light irradiation. In this paper, we review and summarize the traditional air cleaning methods and current photocatalytic oxidation approaches in both of VOCs and formaldehyde degradation in indoor environments. Influencing factors such as temperature, relative humidity, deactivation and reactivations of the photocatalyst are discussed. Aspects of the application of the photocatalytic technique to improve the IAQ are suggested.Entities:
Keywords: VOCs; formaldehyde; influencing factors; photocatalysis; review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26742024 PMCID: PMC6273848 DOI: 10.3390/molecules21010056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Potential sources of indoor VOCs.
| VOCs | Possible Sources |
|---|---|
| Formaldehyde | Pesticides, flooring materials, insulating materials, wood-based materials, machine, coatings and paints |
| Toluene | Pesticides, flooring materials, insulating materials, wood-based materials, paints, adhesives, gasoline, combustion sources |
| Acetaldehyde | Wood-based materials, flooring materials, HVAC system |
| Paradichlorobenzene | Ceiling materials, wood-based materials, pesticides |
| Ethylbenzene | Furniture, paints, adhesives, gasoline, combustion sources |
| Methylene chloride | Flooring materials, furniture, HVAC system, coatings and paints |
| Chloroethylene | Flooring materials, coatings and paints, dry-cleaned clothes |
| Carbon tetrachloride | Coatings and paints, industrial strength cleaners |
| Chloroform | Pesticide, glue |
| Naphthalene | Insulating materials, mixed materials, wall painting |
| Other VOCs (e.g., esters and ketones) | Plastics, resins, plasticizers, solvents usage, flavors, perfumes, paints, disinfectants, adhesives |
Summary on current control techniques for VOCs removal.
| Techniques | Principle | By-Product | Advantage | Disadvantage | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Botanical purification | Air is passed through a planted soil or directly on the plants. The contaminants are then degraded by microorganisms and/or plants, the precise mechanisms being unclear. | CO2, organic and amino acids | Low cost, no secondary pollution, beautifying the indoor environment | The purification effect is bad for high concentration pollutants | [ |
| Catalytic combustion | Combustion of VOCs at low temperature with the help of a catalyst. | CO2, H2O | Wide range of application coverage, high efficiency, no secondary pollution | Not suitable for gas containing dust particles and droplets | [ |
| Bio-filtration | Bio-filtration is a process in which contaminated airs passed through a biological stuffing medium that supports many kinds microorganism that biodegrade the VOCs. | Biomass | Little or no energy needs to be added in the form of heat or radiation to support this process | The equipment is big, long residence time, easy to jam | [ |
| Absorption | Absorption is used to remove VOCs from gas streams by contacting the contaminated air with a liquid solvent. | Wastewater | Product recovery can offset annual operating costs | High demands on absorbent, complex process, high cost | [ |
| Zeolite based adsorption | Air pollutants are adsorbed onto zeolites, often as filtration post-treatment. | Spent zeolite and collected organics | Effective in more than 90% RH as the adsorbent might be too specific | Pollutant reemission | [ |
| Activated carbon based adsorption | VOCs are removed from the inlet air by physical adsorption onto the surface of the carbon. | Spent carbon and collected organics | Recovery of compounds, which may offset annual operating costs | They are flammable, difficult to regenerate for high boiling solvents, promote polymerization or oxidation of some solvents to toxic or insoluble compounds, and require humidity control. | [ |
| Membrane Separation | Pollutants are passed through a membrane into another fluid by affinity separation. | Exhausted membrane | No further treatment, simple process, small energy consumption, no secondary pollution | The stability of the membrane was poor | [ |
Scheme 1The PCO reaction mechanism for o-xylene.
Summary on the intermediates formed in photocatalytic oxidation of typical indoor VOCs.
| Target VOC | Concentration (ppm) | Light Source | Main Intermediates | Chemical | Analytical Method | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benzene | 3000–6000 | 4000 W Xe lamp | Benzaldehyde, benzoic acid | - | GC/MS | [ |
| 614 | White fluorescent lamp | Phenol | Hydroquinone, 1,4-benzoquinone | GC/MS | [ | |
| - | - | Phenol, hydro-quinone, benzoic acid | Malonic acid, benzoquinone | GC/MS/FTIR | [ | |
| Toluene | 10 | Black light lamp | Benzaldehyde, benzoic acid | Benzyl alcohol | FTIR | [ |
| 50–800 | 365 nm UV | Acetone, acetaldehyde, formaldehyde | Acrolein, butanone | TDS-GC/MS/FID, HPLC/UV/FTIR | [ | |
| 370 | >400 nm | Benzaldehyde, benzoic acid | - | DRIFTS | [ | |
| Xylene | 3000–6000 | 4000 W Xe lamp | Benzaldehyde, Methyl-benzaldehydes | 2,5-Furandione, 1,3-isobenzofurandione | GC/MS | [ |
| 25–75 | UV | - | FTIR | [ |
Summary on potential photocatalysts applied for indoor VOCs removal.
| Photocatalyst | Preparation/Coating Method | Configuration | Compounds | Light Source | ηremoval (%) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TiO2 | Sol-gel | F | Acetone, toluene | UV lamp, 254 nm | 77–62 (3 L/min) | [ |
| TiO2 | Electrochemical | F | Acetaldehyde | UV | 99+ (110 min) | [ |
| TiO2 | Sol-gel | F | Toluene | Black light | 52 (3.6 L/min) | [ |
| TiO2 | Plasma deposited | F | UV lamp | 99+ (30 min) | [ | |
| TiO2−xNx | Calcination | P | Toluene | Visible light | 99+ (3000 min) | [ |
| TiO2−xNx | Hydrothermal | P | Acetaldehyde | Fluorescence | - | [ |
| C-TiO2 | Hydrothermal | P | Toluene | Visible light | 60+ (120 min) | [ |
| C-TiO2 | Hydrothermal | P | Toluene | Visible light | 20 (120 min) | [ |
| CNT-TiO2 | Hydrothermal | P | Styrene | UV-LED, 365 nm | 50 (20 mL/min) | [ |
| Pt/TiO2 | Photo-deposition | P | Benzene | Black light, 300–420 nm | 100 (100 mL/min) | [ |
| Ln3+-TiO2 | Sol-gel | P | Benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, | UV, 365 nm | 22–79 | [ |
| Ce-TiO2 | Sol-gel | F | Toluene | Visible light | 90 | [ |
| Fe-TiO2 | Sol-gel | P | Visible light—LED | 22 (5 min) | [ | |
| Fe-TiO2 | Sol-gel | P | Toluene | Visible light | 99+ (120 min) | [ |
| In(OH)3 | Ultrasound radiation | P | Acetone, Benzene, Toluene | UV lamp, 254 nm | 99+ (5 h) | [ |
| β-Ga2O3 | Chemical deposition | P | Benzene | UV-lamp, 254 nm | 60 (20 mL/min) | [ |
| Ag4V2O7/Ag3VO4 | Hydrothermal | P | Benzene | White fluorescent lamp | 99+ (120 min) | [ |
| Pt/WO3 | Photo-deposition | P | DCA, 4-CP, TMA | Visible light, >420 nm | 99+ (3 h) | [ |
| Pd/WO3 | Calcination | P | Acetaldehyde, toluene | Fluorescence/visible light | 99+ (3 h) | [ |
DCA: dichloroacetate; 4-CP: 4-chlorophenol; TMA: tetramethylammonium; P: powder; F: film.
Summary of the PCOs used for formaldehyde degradation.
| Catalyst | Preparation Method | HCHO Concentration | Light Source | Conversion Efficiency | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mesoporous TiO2 | Evaporation-induced self-assembly | 30 ppm | UV light | 95.8% | [ |
| Amorphous TiO2 film | CVD method | 50–55 ppm | UV light | 80% | [ |
| PEG modified TiO2 film | Sol-gel method | 20 ppm | UV light | 95% | [ |
| TiO2 coating on polyester fiber | Spray coating | 24.6 ± 2.8 ppm | UV light | 90% | [ |
| UV/TiO2/O3 | Sol-gel | 18 ppm | UV light | 79.4% | [ |
| Ag/TiO2 | Incipient wet impregnation | 500 ppm | UV light | Above 95% | [ |
| Pt@TiO2 | Reverse micelle sol-gel | 10 ppm | Vis light | 98.3% | [ |
| Ce/TiO2 | Sol-gel | 1 ppb | UV light | Above 70% | [ |
| Pd-TiO2 film | Sol-gel dip coating | 500 ppb | UV light | Above 95% | [ |
| Acrylic-silicon/nano-TiO2 | Emulsion blend | 0.8 ppm | Vis light | 83.4% | [ |
| N-doped TiO2 film | Precipitation-peptization | 0.24 ppm | Vis light | 90% | [ |
| AC loading TiO2 | Microwave-assisted synthetic | 30 ppm | UV light | 58.68% | [ |
| Pt@SnO2 | Sol-gel method | — | Vis light | 93.2% | [ |
| α-Bi2O3 | Calcination of hydrothermally prepared (BiO)2CO3 | 100 ppm | Vis light | 62.5% | [ |
| Nano-ZnO | Mixing-calcination | 2.5–25 ppb | UV light | 73% | [ |
| Zr0.08Ti0.92O2 | Sol-gel method | 0.08 ppb | UV-vis light | 92% | [ |
| Zn2SnO4 | Hydrothermal method | 2 ppm | UV-vis light | 70% | [ |
Kinetic parameters and PCO conversion efficiency (%) for the common VOCs.
| Pollutants | Reactor Design | Initial Reaction Conditions | Deactivation | Ref. | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RT | Photocatalyst | [VOC] Gas (ppm) | PW(nm)/I (mW·cm−2) | RH (%) | T (°C) | |||
| Styrene | CR | CNT-TiO2 | 25 ± 1.5 | 365/70 | - | - | Y | [ |
| Benzene | CR | Pt/TiO2 | 80 | 300–420/- | 65 | Ambient | n.r. | [ |
| CR | In(OH)3 | 920 | 245/- | - | 25 | n.r. | [ | |
| Acetone | CR | In(OH)3 | 420 | 245/- | - | 30 ± 1 | n.r. | [ |
| Toluene | CR | TiO2 | 10 | >300/0.7 | 0–40 | Ambient | Y | [ |
| CR | TiO2 | 17–35 | 365/2.34 | 47 | 25 | n.r. | [ | |
| CR | P25 | 50–800 | 365/10 ± 1 | 0–50 | 25 | n.r. | [ | |
| CR | Ce-TiO2 | 0.15–0.6 | Visible/- | <3–75 | 42 | n.r. | [ | |
| CR | Fe-TiO2 | 370 | >400/- | 60 | 25 | Y + N | [ | |
| CR | Ln3+-TiO2 | 23 ± 2 | 365/0.75 | - | - | n.r. | [ | |
| CR | In(OH)3 | 1220 | 245/- | - | 25 | n.r. | [ | |
| CR | TiO2 fibers | 200 | 365/9 | 20–60 | - | n.r. | [ | |
| Xylene | CR | P25 | 25–75 | UV/1.5 | 30–90 | - | Y | [ |
CR: continuous reactor; BR: batch reactor; [VOC] gas = VOC gas-phase concentration; I = light intensity; RH = relative humidity; T = temperature; Y: catalyst deactivation observed; N: catalyst deactivation not observed; Y + N: catalyst partial deactivation and can be regenerated completely; n.r.: reference includes no data on catalyst deactivation; -: reference includes no data on light intensity.