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Characterizing Polyurethane Foam as a Sink for or Source of Volatile Organic Compounds in Indoor Air
Authors:Dongye Zhao  John C Little  Steven S Cox
Affiliation:1Assistant Professor, Dept. of Civil Engineering, 238 Harbert Engineering Center, Auburn Univ., Auburn, AL 36849 (corresponding author).
2Professor, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 418 Durham Hall, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061-0246.
3Instructor, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 418 Durham Hall, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061-0246.
Abstract:Polyurethane foam (PUF) is widely used in indoor consumer products. Despite strong potential interactions with volatile organic compounds (VOCs), the effect of PUF on indoor concentrations of VOCs has not been examined. This study determines the behavior of PUF as a potential sink for or source of VOCs in indoor air. A flexible polyether-type foam and eight aromatic VOCs ranging in molecular weight from naphthalene to benzene were studied. Rapid determinations of PUF–air partition coefficient (K) and PUF–phase diffusion coefficient (D) were achieved using a dynamic microbalance procedure. A diffusion model was applied to interpret the experimental data. The PUF sample was assumed to conform to semi-infinite cylindrical geometry with solid-phase diffusion being the rate limiting step. The results indicate that sorption of VOCs by PUF is fully reversible. For the VOCs studied, K can be correlated with vapor pressure and D with molecular free surface area. Humidity appears to reduce the extent of sorption and slow the sorption kinetics. These findings should facilitate the prediction of the source/sink behavior of PUF and the related impact on VOC concentrations in the indoor environment.
Keywords:Desorption  Diffusion  Indoor air pollution  Models  Sorption  Polyurethane  Volatile organic chemicals  
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