Envirologics Design-Build

Green Building and Design
  • rss
  • Blog
  • Design/Build
    • Agriboard
    • Resources
  • Health
    • MCS-Resources
  • Recycling
  • Contact

Creation of a new material capable of eliminating pollutants by the hydrocarbon industry

andyux | August 15, 2008

This article is published at www.eurekalert.org on 26-Feb-2008

A research team of the University of Granada has managed to produce the most useful material to date to eliminate pollutants such as benzene, toluene and xylene, organic solvents widely used in the hydrocarbon industry and generated by road traffic in cities. The world-wide problem of the exposure to aromatic hydrocarbons has mainly focused its attention on benzene, which is considered to be harmful to health, even in low concentrations.

This material is a monolithic carbon aerogel with the advantage of not only being able to retain these pollutants: it can also be easily regenerated and can therefore be used in several cycles. This research has been carried out by David Fairén Jiménez, from the Department of Inorganic Chemistry at the University of Granada, and directed by lecturers Carlos Moreno Castilla and Francisco Carrasco Marín. The aim of this study was to prepare and describe a series of new materials – monolithic carbon aerogels – as adsorbers of benzene, tolene and xylene (BTX).

The study of the elimination of volatile organic compounds from anthropogenic sources – road traffic in cities, solvents, industry, etc. – such as BTX, is very important as these substances are highly pollutant. In order to eliminate these pollutants, “it is necessary to use materials with a high concentration of micropores, which is where the absorption of pollutants takes place, but these pores must be the correct size and properly arranged. Thus, we achieve a high level of efficiency when eliminating and retrieving BTX after the saturation of the material”, said David Fairén.

Furthermore, the design of the adsorbent bed must allow a sufficient contact for the elimination of compounds and at the same time avoid a decrease in pressure. Finally, the material used must withstand the mechanical forces of vibration and movement. David Fairén states that “the monolithic carbon aerogels, which are the materials we worked with, satisfy all these requirements”.

Twice the information
This research provides a methodology for the study of porous samples by comparing definition techniques of the more used surfaces, such as gas adsorption, with other difficult techniques, such as small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). On the one hand, these techniques provide information on the characteristics of these materials and about the physical conditions of pollutants within the pores. On the other hand, they have obtained materials with better properties than other results published in the bibliography regarding the elimination of pollutants such as benzene, toluene and xylene. This is because they have a high capacity to retain pollutant compounds and they can be easily regenerated and used in several cycles. The design of these samples, as they can be synthesized in the required way, makes them suitable to be applied in streams with a high gas flow without a decrease in the pressure of the adsorbent bed.

Reference
David Fairén Jiménez. Department of Inorganic Chemistry of the University of Granada.
Mobile: 0044 7504765078.
E-mail: fairen<@>ugr.es

Categories
green building
Comments rss
Comments rss

« MCS - a better location in Texas? Austin Emerging Projects »

Leave a comment

You can use these tags : <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Workshop in Austin TX

Recent Posts

  • Green By Design Workshop
  • Green - Healthy Building Seminars
  • Solar energy breakthrough
  • Tell Your Senators to Get On Board: Pass Obama’s Green Recovery Plan
  • 703 Wickford remodel
  • Austin Emerging Projects
  • Creation of a new material capable of eliminating pollutants by the hydrocarbon industry
  • MCS - a better location in Texas?
  • MCS - Safe Mobile Home?

Recent Comments

  • Domestic Solar Power on Green By Design Workshop

Archives

  • January 2010
  • April 2009
  • February 2009
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • October 2006
  • May 2006

Categories

  • green building (9)
  • Health (3)
  • mcs (2)

Quote

"The ultimate purpose of business is not, or should not be, simply to make money... is to increase the general well-being of human kind through service, a creative invention and ethical philosophy." The Ecology of Commerce Paul Hawken

Tags

austin Energy green building Healthy Building magnesium oxyde mgo QnA remodel solar steel
rss Comments rss valid xhtml 1.1 get firefox
websites by ecoclients.com