Skip to main content

MANN+HUMMEL filters set for Heilbronn

MANN+HUMMEL to install 26 filters in the German city’s centre.
By David Arminas May 29, 2020 Read time: 3 mins
MANN+HUMMEL filters were recently installed in Indaiatuba, Brazil

Global filtration specialist MANN+HUMMEL says it will start installing its Filter Cubes on a busy road in the centre of Heilbronn, Germany, in July.

The 26 combi filter systems are intended to help protect residents and passers-by from particulates and hazardous gases such as nitrogen dioxide. The hope is to also avoid bans on diesel vehicles, according to MANN+HUMMEL, based in Ludwigsburg, Germany.

The enhanced MANN+HUMMEL combi filter for air includes a filter layer to retain particles and additional activated carbon layers for adsorbing nitrogen dioxide. Highly porous activated carbon media efficiently adsorbs nitrogen dioxide due to their large surface areas.

The company says that its technology stands out thanks to its particularly low-pressure reduction. This means it cleans air efficiently while keeping energy usage low. Control electronics enable the user to adapt filter operation and to react to the changing air quality.

MANN+HUMMEL installed 23 Filter Cubes at Stuttgart’s Neckartor intersection in October 2018. The 250m-long section of road – previously Germany’s worst affected location for particulate matter and hazardous gases – saw a drastic reduction in air pollution, according to the company. The company says that these results convinced municipal authorities and developers outside Germany to install the technology.

For example, in Indaiatuba, an inland Brazilian city with a populaion of around 235,000 people, four Filter Cubes were installed at the beginning of March. The filter columns will be used for a six-month study in the city centre where there is a high concentration of bus and passenger traffic. The technology - completely new to Brazil in this form - filters 80% of particulates ranging from 2.5-10 microns, notes the company. There are plans to extend the project to other Brazilian metropolitan areas.

“More and more residents and municipalities are becoming aware of the dangers to health posed by high concentrations of air pollutants, like particulates. As specialists in filtration systems, we are using our expertise to help make the air in cities cleaner and thus improve the quality of life,” said Jan-Eric Raschke, director of public air solutions at MANN+HUMMEL.

In the South Korean capital Seoul, particulate matter is increasingly becoming the focus of public attention. In January, Samsung C&T Corporation - part of the Samsung empire and which focuses on engineering and construction projects, trade and investment, fashion and resorts – installed eight Filter Cubes III in the entrance area of its Everland Resort. The Korean company also had two filter columns installed at a playground in a new residential complex.

So far, 92 columns have been installed on three continents. MANN+HUMMEL estimates that its Cubes clean around 1.25 million cubic meters of air per hour worldwide. Filter Cubes can be used anywhere where people are exposed to particularly high levels of particulate matter and nitrogen dioxide. This applies, for example, to streets with heavy traffic and large intersections. Further application areas include bus stops, train stations and underground stations.

In addition to the free-standing Filter Cubes, MANN+HUMMEL also provides filtration systems that can be integrated directly into bus stops or into advertising or information boards.

MANN+HUMMEL is a global provider of filtration systems for vehicles, industrial applications, the clean indoor-air in industry and public spaces. Products include air filter systems, suction systems, liquid filter systems, technical plastic parts, filter media, cabin filters, industrial filters as well as membranes and modules for water filtration, wastewater treatment and process applications.

 

Related Content

  • Traffic management drives sustainability
    June 18, 2012
    New initiatives could boost transport sustainability – David Crawford writes. New roles are opening up for urban traffic management systems in helping city authorities to meet increasingly stringent governmental and supra-governmental air quality standards. European local authorities are typically tasked with both traffic management and pollution monitoring within their areas, making them well placed to draw on the latter to mitigate the impacts of the former.
  • Breathing Ecological Roads – GRAA winner
    May 10, 2018
    The IRF office in Washington has presented an award to revolutionary ecological permeable pavement that helps avoid heat islands Climate specialists and town planners everywhere are increasingly aware of the thermal impacts of city pavements which trap heat on hot summer days, and are known as “urban heat islands”. These heat islands can adversely impact the sustainability of cities by increasing the dependence on mechanical cooling. Permeable pavements, such as porous asphalt, offer some relief but typi
  • Clean air solution to cut pollution
    March 2, 2017
    An innovative material is now available that could help absorb harmful airborne molecules and disperse cleaner air. The material has been developed by a team of leading Italian researchers and is being rolled-out across several European cities, including Rome and Milan. The material will be used on outdoor advertising sites in London and Italy. The launch of this material comes following a series of alarming studies warning about the dangers posed by air pollution to Londoners. Last week, a new stud
  • Mega city transport in Mexico
    June 13, 2012
    Rapid urban growth is resulting in massive mega cities with major transport needs and Mexico City is one of the world’s largest – Mike Woof reports Mexico City is a vast, sprawling metropolis and one of the world’s largest cities, resulting in huge problems for its inhabitants, particularly with regard to infrastructure. Measuring population size is an inexact science for large cities as suburban areas can add to the figures considerably, especially in developing nations where unplanned expansion is as comm