Chemistry and microbiology of green building materials

While the market for “green” building materials has been expanding rapidly, no rigorous framework exists for evaluating the chemical and biological reactivity of these building materials. The objective of this research was to assess the ozone reactivity, primary and secondary VOC emission rates and...

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Main Author: Hoang, Chi Phuong
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/6894
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-68942015-09-20T16:53:37ZChemistry and microbiology of green building materialsHoang, Chi PhuongBuilding materialsOzone reactivityMold resistanceWhile the market for “green” building materials has been expanding rapidly, no rigorous framework exists for evaluating the chemical and biological reactivity of these building materials. The objective of this research was to assess the ozone reactivity, primary and secondary VOC emission rates and mold resistance of selected green building materials. Two different sets of experiments were conducted. The first set focused on reactive consumption of ozone by ten common green materials. A screening assessment of secondary emissions of C6 and greater carbonyls was also completed for selected green materials. The second set was completed to evaluate the relative resistance of selected green building materials and their conventional analogs to surface fungal growth in moist interior environments. Ozone reactivity varied considerably between test materials. The ozone deposition velocity for inorganic ceiling tiles, for example, was two times higher than cabinetry materials and approximately fifty times higher than UV-coated bamboo. Experimental results were used as input to a simple mass balance model which predicted that the ratio of indoor to outdoor ozone concentrations was not significantly affected by green building materials. The green materials used in this study emitted less primary and secondary VOCs than did their non-green counterparts, although the difference was not significant and the material sample set was relatively small. Also, the green materials tested were not prone to either less or more mold growth than their conventional counterparts. Instead, materials composed of organic materials with high equilibrium moisture contents (EMC) were more prone to mold growth than inorganic materials with low EMC. Perlite-based (inorganic) ceiling tiles that consumed relatively large amounts of ozone without corresponding by-product formation were also resistant to mold growth. Such findings should facilitate the selection of future green building materials, both explicitly and by defining a protocol for future testing of green materials.text2010-02-05T19:31:36Z2010-02-05T19:31:36Z2009-052010-02-05T19:31:36Zelectronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/6894engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Building materials
Ozone reactivity
Mold resistance
spellingShingle Building materials
Ozone reactivity
Mold resistance
Hoang, Chi Phuong
Chemistry and microbiology of green building materials
description While the market for “green” building materials has been expanding rapidly, no rigorous framework exists for evaluating the chemical and biological reactivity of these building materials. The objective of this research was to assess the ozone reactivity, primary and secondary VOC emission rates and mold resistance of selected green building materials. Two different sets of experiments were conducted. The first set focused on reactive consumption of ozone by ten common green materials. A screening assessment of secondary emissions of C6 and greater carbonyls was also completed for selected green materials. The second set was completed to evaluate the relative resistance of selected green building materials and their conventional analogs to surface fungal growth in moist interior environments. Ozone reactivity varied considerably between test materials. The ozone deposition velocity for inorganic ceiling tiles, for example, was two times higher than cabinetry materials and approximately fifty times higher than UV-coated bamboo. Experimental results were used as input to a simple mass balance model which predicted that the ratio of indoor to outdoor ozone concentrations was not significantly affected by green building materials. The green materials used in this study emitted less primary and secondary VOCs than did their non-green counterparts, although the difference was not significant and the material sample set was relatively small. Also, the green materials tested were not prone to either less or more mold growth than their conventional counterparts. Instead, materials composed of organic materials with high equilibrium moisture contents (EMC) were more prone to mold growth than inorganic materials with low EMC. Perlite-based (inorganic) ceiling tiles that consumed relatively large amounts of ozone without corresponding by-product formation were also resistant to mold growth. Such findings should facilitate the selection of future green building materials, both explicitly and by defining a protocol for future testing of green materials. === text
author Hoang, Chi Phuong
author_facet Hoang, Chi Phuong
author_sort Hoang, Chi Phuong
title Chemistry and microbiology of green building materials
title_short Chemistry and microbiology of green building materials
title_full Chemistry and microbiology of green building materials
title_fullStr Chemistry and microbiology of green building materials
title_full_unstemmed Chemistry and microbiology of green building materials
title_sort chemistry and microbiology of green building materials
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/6894
work_keys_str_mv AT hoangchiphuong chemistryandmicrobiologyofgreenbuildingmaterials
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