Concrete may help curb air pollution: study
The building material absorbs
sulphur dioxide
Concrete surfaces can help
tackle air pollution as it absorbs sulphur dioxide a major pollutant,
scientists have found.
The strategy of using
pollution causing material and turning it into an environmental solution could
lead to new thinking in urban design and waste management, researchers said.
This could be a significant
step toward the practice of using waste concrete to minimise air pollution,
they said.
“Even though producing
concrete causes air pollution, concrete buildings in urban areas can serve as a
kind of sponge adsorbing sulphur dioxide to a high level,“ said Alex Orlov,
associate professor at Stony Brook University in the US.
“Our findings open up the
possibility that waste concrete coming from building demolitions can be used to
adsorb these pollutants,“ Orlov said.
According to the World
Health Organization (WHO), as many as seven million premature deaths of people
worldwide may be linked to poor air quality and pollution.
Sulphur dioxide emissions
are among the most common pollutants into the air globally, with power plants
emitting the most sulphur dioxide.
Cement kilns also produce
about 20 per cent of all sulphur dioxide industrial emissions.
Concrete remains the most
widely used material in the world and is inexpensive.
Researchers used various
cement and cement-based building materials to conduct their experiments.
They employed Diffuse
Reflectance Infrared Fourier Transform Spectroscopy (DRIFTS) and X-ray
absorption Near Edge Spectroscopy (XANES) to identify the levels of sulphur
dioxide adsorption on the materials.
Researchers cautioned that
the capacity for concrete to adsorb pollutants diminishes over time as the material
ages.
Crushing concrete, however,
can expose new surfaces and restore its pollution removing properties.
The study was published in
the Journal of Chemical Engineering.
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