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| Last Updated:24/04/2024

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Plants Clear Indoors of Pollutants, Study Finds

 

WASHINGTON — Polluted air is  a  public  health  problem, not  only outdoors, but indoors as well. Experts say it can be even worse inside because of the variety  of  household  chemicals  that  emit  fumes  and irritating particulates. Researchers, however, have found that plants, as part of their carbon exchange cycle, can take up these pollutants, clearing the air in homes.

 

 

 

It makes sense in  a way  since we could  not  live  without plants. They  absorb  the  carbon  dioxide  that we exhale, and release the oxygen we need to breathe. And we depend on plants to produce an  enormous amount  of  oxygen, according to Vadoud Niri from the State  University  of   New  York  at  Oswego. “Each  of  us  breathes  over  3,000  gallons of  air  every  day. And  also, we  can’t go without  air  over  three  minutes. So  it  means   that  air  quality  is  extremely   important  and  we  need  clean  air  to  breathe  every day.”Scientists say air pollution, caused  by  chemicals  called  volatile organic  compounds (VOCs), is three to five  times  greater  inside  our homes. VOCs  include  cancer-causing benzene  and formaldehyde, which  are  given off by paints, upholstery,  printers  and  stored  fuel.Indoor  air  pollution  can  be  the  source  of  “sick  building   syndrome,” which can cause dizziness, asthma and allergies.

New approach to ‘scrubbing’ air

 

 

 FILE - This Jan. 16, 2016, photo made available  by  NASA shows  a  blooming  zinnia  flower  grown  aboard the International Space Station. As far back as 1984, NASA started testing plants for their air filtration qualities.

The traditional way of removing indoor air pollutants is  through filtration methods that remove harmful air from the house while pumping in cleaner air from outdoors.“But we thought maybe  we  could  use an easier  and  simpler and even cheaper way to get rid  of  these  VOCs,” said Niri.  He said  the idea  to  look into  plants for  filtration  came  from a 1984 report by the U.S. space agency NASA, which  was  investigating  putting plants on the space station to clean the air.In a specially designed chamber, Niri and colleagues tested  five  different  plants  that  are  commonly found in central New York homes: the jade plant, spider plant, a bromeliad, Caribbean tree cactus and dracaena. They were  exposed  to  eight  different  VOCs.Niri says that each plant absorbed many  of  the  different  chemicals, some  specific  to  a  particular  species. The  bromeliad,  for example, took up six of the eight volatile organic compounds it was exposed to. Eighty percent of each  chemical  was absorbed  by  the bromeliad  plant in just 12 hours. The researchers thought it could not absorb the other VOCs, such as chlorine, because its atoms are too big.All five plants were  effective  at  removing  acetone,  the  smelly  compound in nail polish,  from  the  air,  taking  up  around  94  percent of the chemical. For this reason, scientists are anxious  to  see how  well  the plants perform  in  nail salons.“We would recommend that instead of having one plant, five of one plant, we chose one of each to make sure that we uptake all types of VOCs from our air,” Niri  said  of  greenery's  chemical-absorbing  properties .Niri discussed the  air  cleansing properties of plants at the annual meeting of the American Chemical Society. He said the next step is to place plants in actual rooms to see how well they perform.

 

Source:  Science & Technology