Assessment of lignocellulosic nut wastes as an absorbent for gaseous formaldehyde

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Assessment of lignocellulosic nut wastes as an absorbent for gaseous formaldehyde. / Stefanowski, Bronia; Curling, Simon; Ormondroyd, Graham.
In: Industrial Crops and Products, Vol. 98, No. April, 01.04.2017, p. 25-28.

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Stefanowski B, Curling S, Ormondroyd G. Assessment of lignocellulosic nut wastes as an absorbent for gaseous formaldehyde. Industrial Crops and Products. 2017 Apr 1;98(April):25-28. Epub 2017 Jan 18. doi: 10.1016/j.indcrop.2017.01.012

Author

Stefanowski, Bronia ; Curling, Simon ; Ormondroyd, Graham. / Assessment of lignocellulosic nut wastes as an absorbent for gaseous formaldehyde. In: Industrial Crops and Products. 2017 ; Vol. 98, No. April. pp. 25-28.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Assessment of lignocellulosic nut wastes as an absorbent for gaseous formaldehyde

AU - Stefanowski, Bronia

AU - Curling, Simon

AU - Ormondroyd, Graham

PY - 2017/4/1

Y1 - 2017/4/1

N2 - Indoor air quality is of growing concern with a current focus on formaldehyde emissions and sick building syndrome (SBS). One of the main approaches to reduce indoor pollutant concentrations has been to reduce formaldehyde use and emissions from products. Another approach is the potential of materials to act as scavengers to actively sequester formaldehyde from the indoor atmosphere. This paper evaluates the use of the shells of various types of nuts, which are an abundant agricultural waste material. Nut shells were exposed to gaseous formaldehyde using a Dynamic Vapour Sorption system and their nitrogen content determined using the Kjeldahl method. It was found that formaldehyde absorption increased with increasing nitrogen content and that walnut shell, peanut shell and sunflower seed shell could absorb significantly higher quantities of formaldehyde gas than a sheep wool contro

AB - Indoor air quality is of growing concern with a current focus on formaldehyde emissions and sick building syndrome (SBS). One of the main approaches to reduce indoor pollutant concentrations has been to reduce formaldehyde use and emissions from products. Another approach is the potential of materials to act as scavengers to actively sequester formaldehyde from the indoor atmosphere. This paper evaluates the use of the shells of various types of nuts, which are an abundant agricultural waste material. Nut shells were exposed to gaseous formaldehyde using a Dynamic Vapour Sorption system and their nitrogen content determined using the Kjeldahl method. It was found that formaldehyde absorption increased with increasing nitrogen content and that walnut shell, peanut shell and sunflower seed shell could absorb significantly higher quantities of formaldehyde gas than a sheep wool contro

U2 - 10.1016/j.indcrop.2017.01.012

DO - 10.1016/j.indcrop.2017.01.012

M3 - Article

VL - 98

SP - 25

EP - 28

JO - Industrial Crops and Products

JF - Industrial Crops and Products

SN - 0926-6690

IS - April

ER -