1 research outputs found
Quantification of Byproduct Formation from Portable Air Cleaners Using a Proposed Standard Test Method
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, air cleaning technologies
were promoted as useful tools for disinfecting public spaces and combating
airborne pathogen transmission. However, no standard method exists
to assess the potentially harmful byproduct formation from air cleaners.
Through a consensus standard development process, a draft standard
test method to assess portable air cleaner performance was developed,
and a suite of air cleaners employing seven different technologies
was tested. The test method quantifies not only the removal efficiency
of a challenge chemical suite and ultrafine particulate matter but
also byproduct formation. Clean air delivery rates (CADRs) are used
to quantify the chemical and particle removal efficiencies, and an
emission rate framework is used to quantify the formation of formaldehyde,
ozone, and other volatile organic compounds. We find that the tested
photocatalytic oxidation and germicidal ultraviolet light (GUV) technologies
produced the highest levels of aldehyde byproducts having emission
rates of 202 and 243 μg h–1, respectively.
Additionally, GUV using two different wavelengths, 222 and 254 nm,
both produced ultrafine particulate matter