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Bye bye smelly and toxic drywalls: Nanomaterial can destroy noxious odors

By | July 30, 2010, 2:13 PM PDT

Kenneth Klabunde was ahead of his time when he discovered a powder that could destroy a number of toxic chemicals in the early 1990s. The Kansas State University scientist was one of the first to develop nanomaterials capable of destroying toxic chemicals.

This FAST-ACT material was used to combat chemical warfare and was primarily used for military applications back then.

The powder can be sprayed as a fire extinguisher, put into a bottle, or mixed as a liquid. “We did a lot of animal studies to show FAST-ACT wasn’t harmful,” Klabunde says, as it is made from magnesium and titanium.

It’s not surprising that this material is finding other uses, particularly in the household. “Those formulations are now being used in homes to take care of noxious odors,” Klabunde says.

During the housing boom, over 90 million pounds of tainted drywall were imported from China. It all starts with the smell of rotten eggs:

Unfortunately it doesn’t take much hydrogen sulfide to stink up a room with the smell of rotten eggs, corrode the pipes in the house, and sicken the people breathing the toxic gases.

“When chemical odors come off of the drywall, our product will take those out [of the air] without requiring people to tear out the wall board [to deal with the Chinese drywall problem],’ he says. And the powder does this irreversibly — so once the odor is gone, it is destroyed forever.

Used cars and mortuaries could certainly use the odor-quenching material. “It’s useful for anyone, including getting rid of your garbage smell,” Klabunde says.

The material is detoxifying, deodorizing, and safe to use — all functions that make it a perfect product for an infomercial.

Klabunde didn’t originally plan for this powder to be used in the home. Leading up to his discovery in 1993, he was testing reaction rates and products to see how toxins would react with mineral oxides.

Then in 1995, he filed for patents and created the company, NanoScale Corporation. His one employee was also his graduate student. While the company is still private, it has grown to more than 45 workers.

The scientist thinks people could put the powder inside the walls or put it on top of cupboards. “Hydrogen sulfide is a gas and that is the problem. It’s analogous to water,” he says.

The Chinese mined some minerals that contained strontium sulfide. This chemical got put into drywall cement, but the manufacturers didn’t notice. However, when the drywall made its way into American homes, it was exposed to more water vapor.

While there, the drywall chemical slowly reacts to form hydrogen sulfide gas. Not only does it stinks, it is toxic.

Hydrogen sulfur causes pipe damage and corrodes wires in the house. Worse, exposure to the gas can cause respiratory illnesses in humans.

On the upside, hydrogen sulfide reacts with the components of FAST-ACT.

Recently, NanoScale Corporation has integrated the FAST-ACT material with an air cartridge, so the product can destroy drywall chemicals that linger in the air. This reduces people’s exposure to fumes by destroying the gas permanently.

The reason why the FAST-ACT material is effective is because of its big surface area. A few tablespoons of the nanocrystalline powder has the surface area of a football field, the chemistry professor reports.

Credit: Trent Schindler, NSF

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Boonsri Dickinson

About Boonsri Dickinson

Boonsri Dickinson was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2010 to 2012.

Boonsri Dickinson

Boonsri Dickinson

Contributing Editor, Science

Boonsri Dickinson is a freelance journalist based in San Francisco. She has written for Discover, The Huffington Post, Forbes, Nature Biotech, Technewsdaily.com, Techstartups.com and AOL. She's currently a reporter for Business Insider. She holds degrees from the University of Florida and the University of Colorado at Boulder.

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Boonsri Dickinson

Boonsri Dickinson

In the unlikely event that Boonsri has a professional or financial relationship with a company she writes about, it will be prominently disclosed.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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Bears and garbage cans
We have a bear problem - they get into the garbage cans before the garbage truck arrives. If a little of this were sprinkled on top of the contents - I wonder - would this make the can smell uninviting?
Posted by cutting@...
2nd Aug 2010
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RE: Bye bye smelly and toxic drywalls: Nanomaterial can destroy noxious odors
This is HUGE! This product surely has far reaching uses no one has even thought of yet. This is going to become the fastest growing household word!
Posted by Resqued1
4th Aug 2010
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