Journal of hazardous materials | 2021

Effective reduction of roadside air pollution with botanical biofiltration.

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Currently no sustainable, economical and scalable systems have been developed for the direct removal of roadside air pollutants at their source. Here we present a simple and effective air filtering technology: botanical biofiltration, and the first field assessment of three different botanical biofilter designs for the filtration of traffic associated air pollutants - NO2, O3 and PM2.5 - from roadside ambient air in Sydney, Australia. Over two six month research campaigns, we show that all of the tested systems filtered NO2, O3 and PM2.5 with average single pass removal efficiencies of up to 71.5%, 28.1% and 22.1% respectively. Clean air delivery rates of up to 121\xa0m3/h, 50\xa0m3/h and 40\xa0m3/h per m2 of active green wall biofilter were achieved for the three pollutants respectively, with pollutant removal efficiency positively correlated with their ambient concentrations. We propose that large scale field trials of this technology are warranted to promote sustainable urban development and improved public health outcomes.

Volume 414
Pages \n 125566\n
DOI 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.125566
Language English
Journal Journal of hazardous materials

Full Text