Impacts of a clay plaster on actual and perceived indoor air quality

Passive removal materials (PRMs) are building materials or furnishings that can effectively control indoor pollution without substantial formation of chemical byproducts and without energy penalty. To assess clay wall plaster as an effective PRM for improving air quality by controlling ozone, percei...

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Main Author: Darling, Erin Kennedy
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-08-4038
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2011-08-40382015-09-20T17:03:24ZImpacts of a clay plaster on actual and perceived indoor air qualityDarling, Erin KennedyPerceived air qualityClayOzone removalAldehydesPassive removalGreen building materialsPassive removal materials (PRMs) are building materials or furnishings that can effectively control indoor pollution without substantial formation of chemical byproducts and without energy penalty. To assess clay wall plaster as an effective PRM for improving air quality by controlling ozone, perceived air quality (PAQ) was determined in the presence of eight combinations of an emitting and reactive pollutant source (new carpet), clay plaster applied to gypsum wallboard, and chamber air with and without ozone. A panel of 18 to 23 human subjects assessed air quality in twin 30 m3 chambers using a continuous acceptability scale. Air samples were collected immediately prior to panel assessment to quantify concentrations of C5 to C10 saturated n-aldehydes and two aromatic aldehydes that are commonly produced by reaction of ozone with carpet. Perceived Air Quality was most acceptable and concentrations of aldehydes were lowest when only clay plaster or both clay plaster and carpet were present in the chambers without ozone. The least acceptable PAQ and the highest concentrations of aldehydes were observed when carpet and ozone were present together; addition of clay plaster for this condition improved PAQ and considerably decreased aldehyde concentrations. Ozone deposition and byproduct emissions of the clay wall plaster were also assessed using 48 liter stainless steel chambers. Clay plaster applied to gypsum wallboard that had been exposed in a test house (UTest House) for one year effectively removed 88% of the ozone, and emitted high aldehyde concentrations when exposed to high purity air that did not increase when the material was exposed to ozone. The outcome of these experiments leads to speculation that the clay plaster adsorbed contaminants in the test house and then re-emitted them upon exposure to clean air in the small chambers.text2011-10-03T19:22:54Z2011-10-03T19:22:54Z2011-082011-10-03August 20112011-10-03T19:23:03Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-08-40382152/ETD-UT-2011-08-4038eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Perceived air quality
Clay
Ozone removal
Aldehydes
Passive removal
Green building materials
spellingShingle Perceived air quality
Clay
Ozone removal
Aldehydes
Passive removal
Green building materials
Darling, Erin Kennedy
Impacts of a clay plaster on actual and perceived indoor air quality
description Passive removal materials (PRMs) are building materials or furnishings that can effectively control indoor pollution without substantial formation of chemical byproducts and without energy penalty. To assess clay wall plaster as an effective PRM for improving air quality by controlling ozone, perceived air quality (PAQ) was determined in the presence of eight combinations of an emitting and reactive pollutant source (new carpet), clay plaster applied to gypsum wallboard, and chamber air with and without ozone. A panel of 18 to 23 human subjects assessed air quality in twin 30 m3 chambers using a continuous acceptability scale. Air samples were collected immediately prior to panel assessment to quantify concentrations of C5 to C10 saturated n-aldehydes and two aromatic aldehydes that are commonly produced by reaction of ozone with carpet. Perceived Air Quality was most acceptable and concentrations of aldehydes were lowest when only clay plaster or both clay plaster and carpet were present in the chambers without ozone. The least acceptable PAQ and the highest concentrations of aldehydes were observed when carpet and ozone were present together; addition of clay plaster for this condition improved PAQ and considerably decreased aldehyde concentrations. Ozone deposition and byproduct emissions of the clay wall plaster were also assessed using 48 liter stainless steel chambers. Clay plaster applied to gypsum wallboard that had been exposed in a test house (UTest House) for one year effectively removed 88% of the ozone, and emitted high aldehyde concentrations when exposed to high purity air that did not increase when the material was exposed to ozone. The outcome of these experiments leads to speculation that the clay plaster adsorbed contaminants in the test house and then re-emitted them upon exposure to clean air in the small chambers. === text
author Darling, Erin Kennedy
author_facet Darling, Erin Kennedy
author_sort Darling, Erin Kennedy
title Impacts of a clay plaster on actual and perceived indoor air quality
title_short Impacts of a clay plaster on actual and perceived indoor air quality
title_full Impacts of a clay plaster on actual and perceived indoor air quality
title_fullStr Impacts of a clay plaster on actual and perceived indoor air quality
title_full_unstemmed Impacts of a clay plaster on actual and perceived indoor air quality
title_sort impacts of a clay plaster on actual and perceived indoor air quality
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-08-4038
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