JOURNAL ARTICLE

MnO2 Framework for Instantaneous Mineralization of Carcinogenic Airborne Formaldehyde at Room Temperature

Shaopeng RongPengyi ZhangYajie YangLin ZhuJinlong WangFang Liu

Year: 2016 Journal:   ACS Catalysis Vol: 7 (2)Pages: 1057-1067   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Formaldehyde (HCHO) causes increasing concerns, because of its ubiquitous presence in the indoor environment and its irritating and carcinogenic nature, with regard to humans. The fast abatement of HCHO is of significant practical interest at room temperature. In this paper, we fabricate a three-dimensional manganese dioxide framework (3D-MnO2), which has interconnected network structures, low mass density (∼7.3 mg cm–3), and high absorption capacity for organic liquids. In particular, the 3D-MnO2 showed excellent activity and stability for HCHO oxidation at room temperature, achieving 45% of 100 ppm of HCHO mineralized into CO2 under high gas hourly space velocity (GHSV = 180 L gcat–1 h–1). The excellent performance of 3D-MnO2 catalysts in decomposing HCHO can be ascribed to their quick reversibility and high water content for replenishing the consumed surface hydroxyl groups during HCHO decomposition, and fully exposed active reaction sites. It is valuable to know that inexpensive metal oxides such as MnO2 can transform ppm-level HCHO into harmless CO2 in a timeframe as brief as a subsecond at room temperature.

Keywords:
Formaldehyde Decomposition Catalysis Space velocity Manganese Chemistry Mineralization (soil science) Environmental chemistry Chemical engineering Inorganic chemistry Photochemistry Organic chemistry Selectivity

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244
Cited By
9.28
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
51
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
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Citation History

Topics

Catalytic Processes in Materials Science
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
CO2 Reduction Techniques and Catalysts
Physical Sciences →  Energy →  Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Catalysis and Oxidation Reactions
Physical Sciences →  Chemical Engineering →  Catalysis
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