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1.
The primary emissions of VOCs (e.g. solvents) from building products influence the perceived indoor air quality during the initial decay period. However, secondary emissions will continue thereafter (chemical or physical degradation, e.g. oxidation, hydrolysis, mechanical wear, maintenance), in addition to sorption processes. Emission testing for primary VOC emissions is necessary, but insufficient to characterise the impact of building products in their entire life span on the perceived air quality. Methods to distinguish between the two types of emissions are required. Also, the influence of climate parameters on the emission rates is necessary to know for proper testing. Future product development and selection strategies of new building products should consider the secondary emissions, in addition to the contribution from the use of auxiliary agents for cleaning, maintenance, and other potential impacts either physical or chemical in nature. Some of the requirements for emission testing are discussed in terms of secondary vs. primary emissions in order to develop 'healthier/better' building products for the indoor environment. In addition, some of the assumptions about the possible impact of VOCs on health and comfort in the indoor environment are presented. Odour thresholds for VOCs are one or more orders of magnitude lower than the corresponding airway irritation estimates, and it also appears that chemically non-reactive VOCs are not sufficiently strong irritants to cause airway irritation at concentrations normally encountered indoors. Finally, future requirements for analytical laboratory performances is proposed to accommodate the increasing need to establish which VOCs may be responsible for the perception of odour intensity from building products.  相似文献   

2.
Jutta Witten 《Bauphysik》2004,26(5):240-245
Procedure for assessing potential health effects of VOC and SVOC emissions from building products ‐ assessment concepts proposed by the German Committee for Health‐related Evaluation of Building Products (AgBB). Building products for internal spaces can act as significant emission sources of volatile organic substances and seriously affect the quality of the room air. Public law requirements for building products regarding health protection of occupants are anchored in the European Construction Products Directive (89/106/EEC) and through implementation in national law, for example the Building Products Act or the regional building regulations. The European Construction Products Directive defines the requirements relating to health, hygiene and the environment, which are elaborated in Baseline Requirements Document No.3 of the European Commission. In particular, they include the requirements regarding emissions of noxious substances from building products and the avoidance and limitation of volatile organic connections (VOC) in internal spaces. Since no official procedure currently exists for the implementation of these health‐related requirements, the German Committee for Health‐related Evaluation of Building Products (AgBB) substantiated and published test criteria for the assessment of potential health effects of volatile organic compounds (VOC and SVOC emissions) from building products. In line with building laws, this procedure provides standardised test procedures and health‐related assessment criteria with the aim of limiting emissions of volatile organic compounds from building products. Against the background of building authority requirements, this objectifiable and particularly transparent approach will enable consumers, architects, planners and building product manufacturers to evaluate building products for internal spaces at an early stage for their relevance in terms of pollutants and emissions, and to use them appropriately.  相似文献   

3.
《Building and Environment》2004,39(2):165-177
Sources of VOCs were identified and quantified in five tropical air-conditioned office buildings in Singapore. A mass balanced model is applied to determine area-specific emission rates and to apportion the sources of VOCs into 3 broad categories of sources—building materials, ventilation systems and occupants and their activities. The highest contributor of TVOCs comes from the ventilation systems at 39.0%. This was followed by occupants and their activities at 37.3% and finally building materials at 23.7%. Ducted supply and return ventilation design has the lowest VOC area-specific emission rates as compared to buildings employing the open space above the false ceiling as return plenum. The TVOC area-specific emission rates from building materials and ventilation systems decreased from 6 to 12 months. However, some VOCs showed increased emission rates over the same period demonstrating sink effects which resulted in secondary emissions.  相似文献   

4.
We investigate source characteristics and emission dynamics of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in a single‐family house in California utilizing time‐ and space‐resolved measurements. About 200 VOC signals, corresponding to more than 200 species, were measured during 8 weeks in summer and five in winter. Spatially resolved measurements, along with tracer data, reveal that VOCs in the living space were mainly emitted directly into that space, with minor contributions from the crawlspace, attic, or outdoors. Time‐resolved measurements in the living space exhibited baseline levels far above outdoor levels for most VOCs; many compounds also displayed patterns of intermittent short‐term enhancements (spikes) well above the indoor baseline. Compounds were categorized as “high‐baseline” or “spike‐dominated” based on indoor‐to‐outdoor concentration ratio and indoor mean‐to‐median ratio. Short‐term spikes were associated with occupants and their activities, especially cooking. High‐baseline compounds indicate continuous indoor emissions from building materials and furnishings. Indoor emission rates for high‐baseline species, quantified with 2‐hour resolution, exhibited strong temperature dependence and were affected by air‐change rates. Decomposition of wooden building materials is suggested as a major source for acetic acid, formic acid, and methanol, which together accounted for ~75% of the total continuous indoor emissions of high‐baseline species.  相似文献   

5.
An aim in developing low volatile organic compound (VOCs) emission house is to reduce the level of VOCs in domestic housing. In this study, a case study for the reduction of exposure to VOCs from a newly constructed residential house was presented. Before application, the construction materials used in the house were tested in an environmental chamber and low VOC emission materials were then selected. Design of the house abided by the following principals: maximizing the ventilation rate and avoiding the use of high VOC emission materials in the house. By improved building design and proper construction materials selection, risk of personal exposure to VOCs in the house was significantly reduced. The total VOCs (TVOCs) concentrations measured in the house ranged from non-detectable to 43 μg/m3. These values were much lower than the published values (0.48–31.7 mg/m3) for new houses in Scandinavian countries and in the USA. The low TVOCs concentrations obtained in this study probably resulted from the high ventilation rates and the use of low VOCs emission materials. This study also combined the results with the three traditional ways in improvement of IAQ. The results obtained in this study confirmed that the most effective strategy for controlling IAQ was pollution prevention and the next most important was the design of ventilation rates to handle uncontrollable sources. The effectiveness of aging as a means of indoor pollution control was also reviewed.  相似文献   

6.
The emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from building materials may significantly contribute to indoor air pollution, and VOCs have been associated with odor annoyance and adverse health effects. Wood materials together with coatings are commonly used indoors for furniture and large surfaces such as walls, floors, and ceilings. This leads to high surface-to-volume ratios, and therefore, these materials may participate remarkably to the VOC levels of indoor environment. We studied emissions of VOCs and carbonyl compounds from pinewood (Pinus sylvestris) boards of 10% and 16% moisture contents (MC) with three paints using small-scale test chambers (27 L). The emissions from uncoated pinewood and paints (on a glass substrate) were tested as references. The 28-day experiment showed that the VOC emissions from uncoated pinewood were lower from sample with 16% MC. Painted pinewood samples showed lower emissions compared to paints on glass substrate. Additionally, paints on 16% MC pinewood exhibited lower emissions than on drier 10% MC wood. The emissions from painted pinewood samples were dominated by paint-based compounds, but the share of wood-based compounds increased over time. However, we noticed differences between the paints, and wood-based emissions were clearly higher with the most permeable paint.  相似文献   

7.
Building materials and human activities are important sources of contamination indoors, but little information is available regarding contamination during construction process which could persist during the whole life of buildings. In this study, six construction stages on two construction sites were investigated regarding the emissions of 43 volatile organic compounds (VOCs), 46 semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs), and the presence of 4 genera of mold. Results show that the future indoor air quality does not only depend on the emissions of each building product but that it is also closely related to the whole implementation process. Mold spore measurements can reach 1400 CFU/m3, which is particularly high compared with the concentrations usually measured in indoor environments. Relatively low concentrations of VOCs were observed, in relation to the use of low emissive materials. Among SVOCs analyzed, some phthalates, permethrin, and hydrocarbons were found in significant concentrations upon the delivery of building as well as triclosan, suspected to be endocrine disruptor, and yet prohibited in the treatment of materials and construction since 2014. As some regulations exist for VOC emissions, it is necessary to implement them for SVOCs due to their toxicity.  相似文献   

8.
Indoor volatile organic compound (VOC) data obtained in 100 Hong Kong homes were analyzed to investigate the nature of emission sources and their contributions to indoor concentrations. A principal component analysis (PCA) showed that off-gassing of building materials, household products, painted wood products, room freshener, mothballs and consumer products were the major sources of VOCs in Hong Kong homes. The source apportionments were then evaluated by using an absolute principal component scores (APCS) technique combined with multiple linear regressions. The results indicated that 76.5 ± 1% (average ± standard error) of the total VOC emissions in Hong Kong homes attributes to the off-gassing of building materials, followed by the room freshener (8 ± 4%), household products (6 ± 2%), mothballs (5 ± 3%) and painted wood products (4 ± 2%). Analysis on the source strength in the monitored homes revealed that although six indoor sources were identified and quantified in the Hong Kong homes, only some homes were responsible for the elevated concentrations of target VOCs emitted from these sources. The findings provide us the mechanism of reducing levels of indoor VOCs and ultimately lead to cost effective reduction in population exposures.  相似文献   

9.
There are many mass-transfer models for predicting VOC emissions from building materials described in the literature. In these models, the volatile organic compound (VOC) emission rate and its concentration in a chamber or a room are usually obtained by analytical method or numerical method. Although these methods demonstrate some salient features, they also have some flaws, e.g., for analytical method the solutions of both room or chamber VOC concentration and building material VOC emission rate are constituted of the sum of an infinite series, in which additional computation for finding roots to a transcendental function is necessary, but sometimes quite complicated. Besides, when it is applied in complex cases such as multilayer emission with internal reaction, the solution is very difficult to get; for conventional numerical methods such as finite difference method, discrete treatment of both time and space may cause calculation errors. Considering that, the state-space method widely used in modern automation control field and the heat transfer field is applied to simulate VOC emissions from building materials. It assumes that a slab of building material is composed of a number of finite layers, in each of which the instantaneous VOC concentration is homogenous during the entire process of emission, while the time is kept continuous. Based on this assumption we can predict both the VOC emissions rate and the concentrations of VOCs in the air of a chamber or room. The method is generally applied to simulate VOC emissions from arbitrary layers of building materials, and the solution is explicit and simple. What's more, the method can be applied to the cases where a reaction producing/removing VOC in building materials exists. For some specific cases the method is validated using the experimental data and the analytical solutions in the literature. The method provides a simple but powerful tool for simulating VOC emissions from building materials, which is especially useful in developing indoor air quality (IAQ) simulation software.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The aim of this study was to identify determinants of aldehyde and volatile organic compound (VOC) indoor air concentrations in a sample of more than 140 office rooms, in the framework of the European OFFICAIR research project. A large field campaign was performed, which included (a) the air sampling of aldehydes and VOCs in 37 newly built or recently retrofitted office buildings across 8 European countries in summer and winter and (b) the collection of information on building and offices’ characteristics using checklists. Linear mixed models for repeated measurements were applied to identify the main factors affecting the measured concentrations of selected indoor air pollutants (IAPs). Several associations between aldehydes and VOCs concentrations and buildings’ structural characteristic or occupants’ activity patterns were identified. The aldehyde and VOC determinants in office buildings include building and furnishing materials, indoor climate characteristics (room temperature and relative humidity), the use of consumer products (eg, cleaning and personal care products, office equipment), as well as the presence of outdoor sources in the proximity of the buildings (ie, vehicular traffic). Results also showed that determinants of indoor air concentrations varied considerably among different type of pollutants.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract The presence of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) in indoor air has in past decades often been associated with adverse health effects such as sensory irritation, odour and the more complex set of symptoms called the Sick Building Syndrome (SBS). More recently, a possible link between the increase in the prevalence of allergies throughout the industrialized areas of the world and exposure to elevated concentrations of VOCs has been suggested. In many cases, the total VOC (TVOC) is used as a measure of the concentration of air pollution and, by extension, as a measure of the health risk in non-industrial buildings. However, the TVOC concept has been questioned for a number of reasons, including the facts that it is an ambiguous concept, that individual VOCs making up the whole can be expected to give rise to different effects in people and that researchers have been using different definitions and interpretations of TVOC. This means that simple addition of the quantities of individual VOCs may not be relevant from a health point of view. Twelve researchers from the Nordic countries have reviewed the literature on VOC/TVOC and health. A search of the literature resulted in the identification of about 1100 articles, of which 120 were selected for further examination. A final review of the articles reduced their number to 67 that contained data on both exposure and health effects. The group concluded that indoor air pollution including VOC is most likely a cause of health effects and comfort problems in indoor environments in non-industrial buildings. However, the scientific literature is inconclusive with respect to TVOC as a risk index for health and comfort effects in buildings. Consequently, there is at present an inadequate scientific basis on which to establish limit values/guidelines for TVOC, both for air concentrations, and for emissions from building materials. The group concluded that continued research is required to establish a risk index for health and comfort effects for VOC in non-industrial buildings.  相似文献   

13.
To conserve energy, office buildings with air-conditioning systems in Thailand are operated with a tight thermal envelope. This leads to low fresh-air ventilation rates and is thought to be partly responsible for the sick building syndrome symptoms reported by occupants. The objectives of this study are to measure concentrations and to determine sources of 13 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in office buildings with air-conditioning systems in the business area of Bangkok. Indoor and outdoor air samples from 17 buildings were collected on Tenax-TA sorbent tubes and analyzed for individual VOCs by thermal desorption-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (TD–GC/MS). Building ventilation was measured with a constant injection technique using hexafluorobenzene as a tracer gas. The results show that the VOC concentrations varied significantly among the studied buildings. The two most dominant VOCs were toluene and limonene with average concentrations of 110 and 60.5 μg m−3, respectively. A Wilcoxon sum rank test indicated that the indoor concentrations of aromatic compounds and limonene were statistically higher than outdoor concentrations at the 0.05 level, while the indoor concentrations of chlorinated compounds were not. Indoor emission factors of toluene and limonene were found to be highest with the average values of 80.9 and 18.9 μg m−2 h−1, respectively. Principal component analysis was applied to the emission factors of 13 VOCs, producing three components based on source similarities. Furthermore, a questionnaire survey investigation and field measurements of building air exchange pointed to indoor air complaints related to inadequate ventilation.  相似文献   

14.
Brown SK 《Indoor air》2002,12(1):55-63
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) within new and established buildings have been determined and factors significant to their presence have been identified. In established dwellings, total volatile organic compound (TVOC) concentrations were low, but were approximately four times higher than in outdoor air, showing a dominant effect of indoor sources. The presence of attached garages, site contamination and 'faulty' wool carpet were associated with higher indoor pollution. In three dwellings, unidentified sources of benzene were indicated. Much higher VOC concentrations were observed in new or renovated buildings, persisting above "baseline" levels for several weeks, concentration decay rate correlating with VOC molecular volume, indicating emissions were limited by material diffusion processes. VOC and formaldehyde emission decays in a new dwelling occurred by a double-exponential source model. This shows that persistent low levels of volatile organic pollutants in established dwellings can occur due to long-term emissions from building materials.  相似文献   

15.
Natural materials of biological origin degrade over time and may emit odorous chemical compounds that can influence the perceived indoor air quality. The objective of this study was to investigate how the perceived air quality is influenced by emissions from building products with linseed oil compared with similar conventional synthetic products without linseed oil. Two types of linoleum, two types of wall paint and two types of floor oil were selected as examples of natural products containing linseed oil. The selected synthetic products were PVC floor covering, a water-based paint, and a synthetic floor oil. The emissions from the products were monitored over a one-year period in small ventilated test chambers. The odorous emissions were evaluated by sensory panel assessments of odour intensity and acceptability and by chemical analysis of the odour-active volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and carbonyl compounds. Odour-active VOCs in the emissions from one floor oil with linseed oil and two pure linseed oils were detected by gas chromatography combined with olfactometry (GC-O) and attempted identified with mass spectrometry (MS). The products with linseed oil influenced the perceived air quality more negatively than the similar synthetic products and the odour was persistent over time. It was found that the products with linseed oil did not qualify for the Danish Indoor Climate Label, because of the persistency of the odour. The results of the GC-O/MS investigations and VOC measurements indicated that an almost constant emission of odour-active VOCs with low odour thresholds resulted in the persistency of the odour. The VOCs probably originated from oxidation products from the linseed oil used as raw material. The study indicates that the acceptability of the emissions from the floor oil was influenced by the linseed oil used as raw material. It is therefore suggested that systematic use of less odorous linseed oils may improve the acceptability of the emission from products with linseed oils. The applied combination of sensory assessment of perceived air quality and GC-O/MS seems to be a useful approach in the effort to eliminate unwanted odours from building products.  相似文献   

16.
This study characterized indoor volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and investigated the effects of the dwelling characteristics, building materials, occupant activities, and environmental conditions on indoor VOC concentrations in 40 dwellings located in Melbourne, Australia, in 2008 and 2009. A total of 97 VOCs were identified. Nine VOCs, n‐butane, 2‐methylbutane, toluene, formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, d‐limonene, ethanol, 2‐propanol, and acetic acid, accounted for 68% of the sum of all VOCs. The median indoor concentrations of all VOCs were greater than those measured outdoors. The occupant density was positively associated with indoor VOC concentrations via occupant activities, including respiration and combustion. Terpenes were associated with the use of household cleaning and laundry products. A petroleum‐like indoor VOC signature of alkanes and aromatics was associated with the proximity of major roads. The indoor VOC concentrations were negatively correlated (P < 0.05) with ventilation. Levels of VOCs in these Australian dwellings were lower than those from previous studies in North America and Europe, probably due to a combination of an ongoing temporal decrease in indoor VOC concentrations and the leakier nature of Australian dwellings.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract This study deals with the modeling of air pollution in apartments from laboratory measurements of source strengths, using formaldehyde and Total Volatile Organic Compounds (TVOCs) as model pollutants. The sources in two test apartments were grouped into two: building-related sources and occupant-related sources. The measured source strengths and ventilation rates were used for the prediction of concentrations expected in the apartments. These predictions were compared to measurements in the apartment over 12 months. The conclusions were that the model predictions based on emission rates measured in the laboratory can be used to predict the long-term concentration of the two model pollutants in the apartments. Considering the measured differences in ventilation between the apartments, an occupant emission rate of between 0.2 and 0.3 mg/h/kg body weight could be estimated. Based on previous suggested limits of acceptable exposures of humans to VOCs, an acceptable average emission rate of VOCs from building materials in general was estimated to be about 30 (μ/m2/h. The modeling showed that during the first 200 days, building materials dominated the emissions. After this, sources relating to the occupants dominated. On average about half of the VOC pollution originated from the building materials.  相似文献   

18.
Hotel housekeepers represent a large, low-income, predominantly minority, and high-risk workforce. Little is known about their exposure to chemicals, including volatile organic compounds (VOCs). This study evaluates VOC exposures of housekeepers, sources and factors affecting VOC levels, and provides preliminary estimates of VOC-related health risks. We utilized indoor and personal sampling at two hotels, assessed ventilation, and characterized the VOC composition of cleaning agents. Personal sampling of hotel staff showed a total target VOC concentration of 57 ± 36 µg/m3 (mean ± SD), about twice that of indoor samples. VOCs of greatest health significance included chloroform and formaldehyde. Several workers had exposure to alkanes that could cause non-cancer effects. VOC levels were negatively correlated with estimated air change rates. The composition and concentrations of the tested products and air samples helped identify possible emission sources, which included building sources (for formaldehyde), disinfection by-products in the laundry room, and cleaning products. VOC levels and the derived health risks in this study were at the lower range found in the US buildings. The excess lifetime cancer risk (average of 4.1 × 10−5) still indicates a need to lower exposure by reducing or removing toxic constituents, especially formaldehyde, or by increasing ventilation rates.  相似文献   

19.
Kim S  Kim JA  An JY  Kim HJ  Kim SD  Park JC 《Indoor air》2007,17(5):404-415
Polyvinyl acetate (PVAc) was added as a replacement for melamine-formaldehyde (MF) resin in the formaldehyde-based resin system to reduce formaldehyde and volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions from the adhesives used between plywoods and fancy veneers. A variety of techniques, including 20-l chamber, field and laboratory emission cell (FLEC), VOC analyzer and standard formaldehyde emission test (desiccator method), were used to determine the formaldehyde and VOC emissions from engineered flooring bonded with five different MF resin and PVAc blends at MF/PVAc ratios of 100:0, 70:30, 50:50, 30:70 and 0:100. Although urea-formaldehyde (UF) resin had the highest formaldehyde emission, the emission as determined by desiccator method was reduced by exchanging with MF resin. Furthermore, the formaldehyde emission level was decreased with increasing addition of PVAc as the replacement for MF resin. UF resin in the case of beech was over 5.0 mg/l, which exceeded E2 (1.5-5.0 mg/l) grade. However, MF30:PVAc70 was 相似文献   

20.
Although significant progress has been made in understanding the sources and chemistry of indoor volatile organic compounds (VOCs) during the past decades, much is unknown about the role of humans in indoor air chemistry. In the spring of 2014, we conducted continuous measurements of VOCs using a proton transfer reaction mass spectrometer (PTR‐MS) in a university classroom. Positive matrix factorization (PMF) of the measured VOCs revealed a ‘human influence’ component, which likely represented VOCs produced from human breath and ozonolysis of human skin lipids. The concentration of the human influence component increased with the number of occupants and decreased with ventilation rate in a similar way to CO2, with an average contribution of 40% to the measured daytime VOC concentration. In addition, the human skin lipid ozonolysis products were observed to correlate with CO2 and anticorrelate with O3, suggesting that reactions on human surfaces may be important sources of indoor VOCs and sinks for indoor O3. Our study suggests that humans can substantially affect VOC composition and oxidative capacity in indoor environments.  相似文献   

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