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Why Air Purifiers Are Not Always The
Answer To Indoor Air Quality Problems
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Why Air Purifiers Are Not
Always The Answer To Indoor Air Quality Problems by:
Ed Bishop
Air purifier filters are not always the
answer to air quality problems.
Solving the problem is a much
better approach than masking the symptom.
The following are the
basic approaches to improve indoor air quality;
- Eliminate or control the pollutant source.
- Dilution of
the contaminants through ventilation.
- Removal or
reduction of the contaminants through filtration or purification with
the use of air purifier filters or air
purifiers.
Proper ventilation in a building is a must!
Before the energy crunch in the 1970's, fresh air in buildings
was not really an issue.
When energy costs started to rise, we
started making our buildings more energy efficient with better
insulation and sealing techniques that made the building tighter,
reducing the amount of fresh air into the buildings and increasing
indoor pollution.
After indoor air quality issues came to the
surface, we learned how to reduce energy costs while not compromising
the health of the occupants, through the practice of building science.
Great strides have been made in this area, leading to more
comfortable, healthier, safer homes.
The goal of good
ventilation is to bring in the right amount of fresh air, not too much
or not too little.
This is accomplished by using mechanical
ventilation (exhaust fans, energy recovery units, etc.) that are sized
to the volume of the house and/or according to lifestyle.
Mechanical ventilation not only dilutes contaminants but also
removes excess moisture that can become a mold problem if not properly
addressed.
Moisture can show up as high humidity
(under-ventilated bathrooms, indoor pools or hot tubs and very tight
homes) or water that enters a building either from the outside
(rainwater) or from undetected plumbing leaks.
Addressing these
problems using the right approach, elimination or control of the source
(in this case repair the leak from the outside or finding and repairing
the plumbing leak) makes more sense than trying to rid the mold with
air purifier filters or air purifiers.
Pollutants such as
formaldahyde and benzene can be produced from certain furniture,
carpets, plywood and drapes.
Other sources of benzene are gas
cans, gas powered lawn mowers that are stored in garages that are
attached to the house.
If elimination of these sources is not
an option an air purification device would be the obvious choice.
Toilets, air conditioning coils, heating/cooling ducts and
humans are producers of bacteria. The right plan in these cases would
be an air purifier device.
Carbon Monoxide is caused by
incomplete combustion of appliances that depend on combustion to
operate.
ELIMINATION IS ALWAYS THE ANSWER WHEN IT COMES TO
CARBON MONOXIDE!
FIND THE PROBLEM-FIX THE PROBLEM!
Leave this to a company that is well-versed in carbon monoxide.
Pet and human dander are controlled through proper humidity
control (mechanical ventilation) and air purifier filters.
By
using the combination of source control (elimination), ventilation
(dilution) and good air purifier filters and/or purification system
,your environment will be much heatlthier.
About The
Author
A pioneer in residential contracting, Ed is a
thirty-year industry veteran trained in the “House Is A System”
approach to HVAC design. He was formerly a building analyst instructor,
providing certification training for New York's Home Performance with
ENERGY STAR® program.
For air quality info visit www.expert-air-purifier-reviews.com
edbishop@expert-
air-purifier-reviews.com
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