Formaldehyde

Formaldehyde is a colorless, pungent volatile organic compound (VOC) that off-gasses from building materials, furniture, and upholstery, irritating the eyes, nose, throat, and respiratory system. In AP Enviro it's the classic human-made indoor air pollutant from Topic 7.5 (EK STB-2.E.5).

Verified for the 2027 AP Environmental Science examLast updated June 2026

What is Formaldehyde?

Formaldehyde is a colorless gas with a sharp, pungent smell that's used to manufacture pressed-wood products (like particleboard and plywood), insulation, furniture, upholstery, and carpets. Because it's a volatile organic compound (VOC), it evaporates easily at room temperature and slowly leaks out of these products into indoor air. That slow leak is called off-gassing, and it's strongest when materials are brand new, which is why a freshly built or renovated home often has the highest formaldehyde levels.

In the CED, formaldehyde shows up by name in EK STB-2.E.5 as a common human-made indoor air pollutant that comes from building materials, furniture, and upholstery. Breathing it irritates the eyes, nose, throat, and lungs, and at higher exposures it's classified as a probable human carcinogen. Think of it as the 'new house smell' pollutant. That smell people notice in new furniture or fresh construction is partly formaldehyde and other VOCs off-gassing.

Why Formaldehyde matters in AP Environmental Science

Formaldehyde lives in Topic 7.5 (Indoor Air Pollutants) in Unit 7: Atmospheric Pollution. It directly supports LO 7.5.A (identify indoor air pollutants) and LO 7.5.B (describe their effects). The CED sorts indoor pollutants by source, and formaldehyde is your anchor example for the human-made category, sitting opposite natural-source pollutants like radon, mold, and dust. It also connects forward to Topic 8.13 (Dose Response Curve) in Unit 8, because formaldehyde's health effects scale with exposure. A dose-response curve is exactly the tool you'd use to show how irritation and cancer risk change as concentration increases. If a question describes symptoms in a new building, formaldehyde should be your first suspect.

How Formaldehyde connects across the course

Off-gassing and VOCs (Unit 7)

Formaldehyde is the poster child for off-gassing. It's a VOC trapped in manufactured products that escapes into indoor air over time. When an exam question mentions VOCs from furniture, paneling, or carpets, formaldehyde and benzene are the named examples the CED expects you to know.

Radon (Unit 7)

Radon and formaldehyde are both indoor air pollutants, but they sit in opposite CED categories. Radon is natural, seeping up from soil into basements, while formaldehyde is human-made, coming from the stuff we build houses with. Knowing which source category a pollutant belongs to is exactly what LO 7.5.A tests.

Dose Response Curve (Unit 8)

Topic 8.13 asks you to evaluate how a toxin's effects change with dose. Formaldehyde is a great real-world case. Low doses cause mild eye and throat irritation, while higher or longer exposures raise cancer risk. That increasing-effect-with-increasing-dose pattern is what a dose-response curve graphs.

Carcinogen (Unit 8)

Formaldehyde isn't just an irritant. At sustained higher exposures it's classified as a probable carcinogen, which links indoor air quality to the toxicology concepts in Unit 8. It's a useful example when a question asks for a pollutant with both short-term and long-term health effects.

Is Formaldehyde on the AP Environmental Science exam?

Formaldehyde shows up mostly in multiple-choice questions that test whether you can match an indoor pollutant to its source and symptoms. A classic stem describes a family in a newly constructed home experiencing headaches and respiratory irritation, and the answer is formaldehyde because of off-gassing from new building materials. Another common stem asks which group of pollutants off-gasses from furniture and consumer products, where formaldehyde and benzene flag the answer as VOCs. The skill you need is source-matching. Natural source means radon, mold, or dust; combustion means carbon monoxide and particulates; new building materials and furniture mean formaldehyde and VOCs. No released FRQ has required formaldehyde by name, but it's a strong, specific example to use in an FRQ asking you to identify an indoor air pollutant and describe its health effects.

Formaldehyde vs Carbon monoxide

Both are colorless indoor gases that cause headaches, but they work completely differently. Carbon monoxide comes from incomplete combustion (gas stoves, fireplaces, tobacco smoke) and is an asphyxiant. It binds to hemoglobin about 200 times more strongly than oxygen, starving your body of oxygen. Formaldehyde comes from off-gassing building materials and furniture, and it's an irritant and probable carcinogen, not an asphyxiant. Quick check: combustion source points to CO, new construction or furniture points to formaldehyde.

Key things to remember about Formaldehyde

  • Formaldehyde is a human-made indoor air pollutant named in EK STB-2.E.5, released by off-gassing from building materials, furniture, and upholstery.

  • It is a volatile organic compound (VOC), which means it evaporates easily at room temperature and accumulates in indoor air, especially in new or recently renovated buildings.

  • Short-term exposure irritates the eyes, nose, throat, and respiratory system, while long-term exposure raises cancer risk, making formaldehyde a probable carcinogen.

  • On the exam, 'new home plus headaches and respiratory irritation' is the signature clue pointing to formaldehyde, while combustion sources point to carbon monoxide instead.

  • Formaldehyde connects Unit 7 indoor air quality to Unit 8 toxicology, since its dose-dependent health effects are exactly what a dose-response curve (Topic 8.13) describes.

Frequently asked questions about Formaldehyde

What is formaldehyde in AP Environmental Science?

Formaldehyde is a colorless, pungent VOC that off-gasses from building materials, furniture, and upholstery into indoor air. It's the CED's go-to example of a human-made indoor air pollutant in Topic 7.5, and it irritates the eyes, nose, throat, and lungs.

Is formaldehyde a VOC?

Yes. Formaldehyde is one of the most commonly tested volatile organic compounds, alongside benzene. VOCs evaporate easily at room temperature, which is why formaldehyde escapes from pressed-wood products, carpets, and furniture through off-gassing.

Is formaldehyde a natural or human-made indoor air pollutant?

Human-made. The CED groups indoor pollutants by source, and formaldehyde belongs with VOCs from manufactured products, while radon, mold, and dust are the natural-source examples. Getting this categorization right is exactly what LO 7.5.A asks for.

How is formaldehyde different from carbon monoxide?

Carbon monoxide is an asphyxiant from incomplete combustion that binds hemoglobin about 200 times more strongly than oxygen. Formaldehyde is an irritant and probable carcinogen from off-gassing materials, not combustion. The source in the question stem tells you which one it is.

Why is formaldehyde worse in new homes?

Off-gassing rates are highest when products are new, so freshly installed particleboard, insulation, carpet, and furniture release the most formaldehyde early on. That's why exam scenarios about headaches and respiratory irritation in newly constructed homes point to formaldehyde.