| Literature DB >> 33092884 |
Xiaochen Yue1, Nyuk Ling Ma2, Christian Sonne3, Ruirui Guan1, Su Shiung Lam4, Quyet Van Le5, Xiangmeng Chen6, Yafeng Yang1, Haiping Gu1, Jörg Rinklebe7, Wanxi Peng8.
Abstract
Indoor air pollution with toxic volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and fine particulate matter (PM2.5) is a threat to human health, causing cancer, leukemia, fetal malformation, and abortion. Therefore, the development of technologies to mitigate indoor air pollution is important to avoid adverse effects. Adsorption and photocatalytic oxidation are the current approaches for the removal of VOCs and PM2.5 with high efficiency. In this review we focus on the recent development of indoor air pollution mitigation materials based on adsorption and photocatalytic decomposition. First, we review on the primary indoor air pollutants including formaldehyde, benzene compounds, PM2.5, flame retardants, and plasticizer: Next, the recent advances in the use of adsorption materials including traditional biochar and MOF (metal-organic frameworks) as the new emerging porous materials for VOCs absorption is reviewed. We review the mechanism for mitigation of VOCs using biochar (noncarbonized organic matter partition and adsorption) and MOF together with parameters that affect indoor air pollution removal efficiency based on current mitigation approaches including the mitigation of VOCs using photocatalytic oxidation. Finally, we bring forward perspectives and directions for the development of indoor air mitigation technologies.Entities:
Keywords: Adsorption; Hazardous VOCs; Indoor air pollution; MOFs; PM2.5; Photocatalytic oxidation
Year: 2020 PMID: 33092884 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.124138
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588