Clearing the Air

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It happens to everyone. You get a little distracted, overcook dinner, and then every person who enters the house all evening asks, “What’s burning?!” This illustrates how contaminants can linger inside your home. But many contaminants are odorless and go undetected by the human nose. In addition, humans readily assimilate most smells anyway, so your nose isn’t a very reliable indicator of poor indoor air quality.

Keeping the Air Clean

Good ventilation is a prerequisite for healthy indoor air. Without proper ventilation everyday activities like cooking (especially with gas); showering; and even breathing often make your indoor air more polluted than the air outdoors. New carpeting and fresh paint can make it worse. Your house will always require a certain ventilation rate, but you can minimize the need for ventilation by controlling and reducing the contaminant generated within your home, and by installing some sort of an air treatment system.

Ventilation

ASHRAE (the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers) recommends a minimum ventilation rate of 0.35 air changes/hour, which means that 35% of the air in your home should be replaced by outside air every hour. In most older homes this is accomplished by the normal leakage through cracks, spaces and penetrations in outside walls and around doors and windows. Newer homes are built “tighter” for energy efficiency, and some type of mechanical ventilation must usually be incorporated into the HVAC (heating, ventilating and air conditioning) system to achieve this ventilation rate.

Minimizing Indoor Pollution

Several common products and practices reduce the quality of your indoor air. Here are several, including some identified by Leeann Sagula of BBEI in the Sept./Oct. 2004 issue of eco-structure magazine.

Air fresheners, especially oil-based fresheners that plug into outlets, contain known or suspected neurotoxins. Asthmatics may suffer attacks in homes with air fresheners.
Candles, while good for a romantic atmosphere, produce black soot that accumulates on ceiling and carpet edges — and on occupants’ lungs.
New carpeting, paints and varnishes, if not chosen properly, generate significant amounts of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which are chemical compounds that evaporate readily, can be toxic, and contribute to poor indoor air quality. Ask for low-VOC paints and other coatings. The Carpet and Rug Institute’s (CRI) “Green Label” testing and labeling program identifies carpet products that are truly low-VOC. You can find these products on the CRI Web site.
Cars, gasoline, paint and other chemicals generate toxic gasses. When these are stored in garages, especially attached garages, they can leak into your home. Garages should be well ventilated, preferably with an exhaust fan. Store chemicals, fertilizers and gasoline in an outside shed as far away as possible from home entryways.
Pesticides and chemicals applied outside your home can be tracked into your home and can also come in through open windows. Use natural methods to control pests, fertilize lawns and gardens, and kill weeds. Learn about such organic and natural products on www.extremelygreen.com. Gas-powered lawn mowers are notoriously polluting, and that exhaust gets into your house through open windows. Find out how to get better, healthier lawns with less effort, less expense and less mowing.
Make sure your ducts are clean. Clean ducts will help control the air quality in your home. Go to the National Air Duct Cleaners Association to find a certified duct cleaner. Read the EPA’s ” Should You Have the Air Ducts in your Home Cleaned,” especially to find out whether you should allow chemical biocides to be used during this process.

Air Treatment and Purification

Your HVAC inlet should always be properly filtered. A good filter will minimize the dust, pollen and other contaminants that are introduced into your home. Normal filters remove only dust and some pollens. HEPA filters do a much better job, and some are equipped with media that also filter selected chemicals.

Dehumidifiers are great for controlling humidity in closed spaces, and if you control humidity you are one step toward controlling mold. A ventilation control system can be installed to control the ventilation and to maximize the home’s overall HVAC efficiency. More elaborate central air purification/ventilation/dehumidification systems can do it all, but of course they cost more.

Read more about indoor mold and mold control in EPA’s ” A Brief Guide to Mold, Moisture and Your Home” and in the NAHB Research Center’s ” Mold in Residential Buildings.”

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