Photocatalytic abatement results from a model street canyon
2015
Gallus, M. | Ciuraru, R. | Mothes, F. | Akylas, V. | Barmpas, F. | Beeldens, A. | Bernard, F. | Boonen, E. | Boréave, A. | Cazaunau, M. | Charbonnel, N. | Chen, H. | Daële, V. | Dupart, Y. | Gaimoz, C. | Grosselin, B. | Herrmann, H. | Ifang, S. | Kurtenbach, R. | Maille, M. | Marjanovic, I. | Michoud, V. | Mellouki, A. | Miet, K. | Moussiopoulos, N. | Poulain, L. | Zapf, P. | George, C. | Doussin, J. F. | Kleffmann, J.
During the European Life+ project PhotoPAQ (Demonstration of Photocatalytic remediation Processes on Air Quality), photocatalytic remediation of nitrogen oxides (NOₓ), ozone (O₃), volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and airborne particles on photocatalytic cementitious coating materials was studied in an artificial street canyon setup by comparing with a colocated nonactive reference canyon of the same dimension (5 × 5 × 53 m). Although the photocatalytic material showed reasonably high activity in laboratory studies, no significant reduction of NOₓ, O₃, and VOCs and no impact on particle mass, size distribution, and chemical composition were observed in the field campaign. When comparing nighttime and daytime correlation plots of the two canyons, an average upper limit NOₓ remediation of ≤2 % was derived. This result is consistent only with three recent field studies on photocatalytic NOₓ remediation in the urban atmosphere, whereas much higher reductions were obtained in most other field investigations. Reasons for the controversial results are discussed, and a more consistent picture of the quantitative remediation is obtained after extrapolation of the results from the various field campaigns to realistic main urban street canyon conditions.
Show more [+] Less [-]AGROVOC Keywords
Bibliographic information
This bibliographic record has been provided by National Agricultural Library