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Article

Effect of an Ozone-Generating Air-Purifying Device on Reducing Concentrations of Formaldehyde in Air

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Pages 139-146 | Published online: 24 Feb 2011
 

Abstract

Formaldehyde, an air contaminant found in many indoor air investigations, poses distinct occupational exposure hazards in certain job categories (e.g., mortuary science) but is also of concern when found or suspected in office buildings and homes. A variety of air-purifying devices (APDs) are currently available or marketed for application to reduce or remove concentrations of a variety of indoor air pollutants through the use of ozone as a chemical oxidant. An investigation was conducted to determine if concentrations of formaldehyde similar to those found in industrial hygiene evaluations of funeral homes could be reduced with the use of an ozone-generating APD. An ozone-generating APD was placed in an exposure chamber and formaldehyde-containing embalming solution was allowed to evaporate naturally, creating peak and mean chamber concentrations of 2.5 and 1.3 ppm, respectively. Three 90-minute evaluations were conducted to establish a change in concentration for formaldehyde generated in the chamber. To ensure air mixing, a fan on the APD was allowed to run but the ozone-generating electrostatic plates were removed. After baseline concentration curves for formaldehyde were determined, the electrostatic plates were installed in the APD and the reproducibility of static concentrations of approximately 0.5 ppm ozone was evaluated. In a third evaluation, ozone was introduced into the chamber when formaldehyde was present at peak concentrations of 2.5 ppm. Continuous-reading instruments were used to sample for formaldehyde and ozone. Active sampling methods were also used to sample simultaneously for formaldehyde and a possible reactant product, formic acid. Triplicate measurements were made in each of three evaluations: formaldehyde alone, ozone alone, and formaldehyde and ozone combined. Concentrations of formaldehyde were virtually identical with and without 0.5 ppm ozone. No reduction in formaldehyde concentration was found during a 90-minute evaluation using ozone at this concentration with peak and average concentrations of approximately 2.5 and 1.3 ppm formaldehyde, respectively. The results of this investigation suggest that the use of ozone is ineffective in reducing concentrations of formaldehyde. Because ozone has demonstrated health hazards, and is a regulated air contaminant in both the occupational and ambient environment, the use of ozone as an air purification agent in indoor air does not seem warranted.

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