Web Release Date: February 21,
Kinetic Analysis of Competition between Aerosol Particle Removal and Generation by Ionization Air Purifiers
Department of Chemistry, University of California, Irvine, California 92697-2025
Received for review July 24, 2006
Revised manuscript received October 23, 2006
Accepted January 19, 2007
Abstract:
Ionization air purifiers are increasingly used to remove
aerosol particles from indoor air. However, certain ionization
air purifiers also emit ozone. Reactions between the
emitted ozone and unsaturated volatile organic compounds
(VOC) commonly found in indoor air produce additional
respirable aerosol particles in the ultrafine (<0.1
m) and
fine (<2.5
m) size domains. A simple kinetic model is
used to analyze the competition between the removal and
generation of particulate matter by ionization air purifiers
under conditions of a typical residential building. This model
predicts that certain widely used ionization air purifiers
may actually increase the mass concentration of fine and
ultrafine particulates in the presence of common
unsaturated VOC, such as limonene contained in many
household cleaning products. This prediction is supported
by an explicit observation of ultrafine particle nucleation
events caused by the addition of D-limonene to a ventilated
office room equipped with a common ionization air
purifier.
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