Residential

Building Science: 5 Criteria for Evaluating and Comparing Air Filters

The type of air filters you provide in your homes can have a lasting effect on indoor air quality for your customers.

7 MIN READ

If I asked you to rate the quality of the air in the homes you build, how would it score? Would that rating be based on anything more than a guess? Very few of us know if our homes are filled with harmful gases or lung-damaging particulates. There are two primary sources of this invisible pollution soup. The first is comprised of gaseous pollutants from complex chemicals that originate in all the stuff we use. Some of these gases are toxic to start with, but most are relatively harmless in small amounts until they mix with each other. Because there is little data on the effects of these chemicals on health, we must assume these compounds should be diluted and ventilated or preferably eliminated before we start. The other key ingredient is particulate matter from plants, animals, shoes, carpet, cooking, and other sources. Many are unaware of these hazards until they cause us to sneeze or there’s a detectable odor.

As discussed in previous issues, it is imperative that homes have both controlled and distributed ventilation as well as good filtration. We are covering the particulate side of this equation here.

So, how do we manage the invisible? One tool, in combination with good ventilation, is an active air filtration system, measured by filter performance. Here are five criteria for evaluating and comparing active filtration systems.

Particle Removal

Before considering the merits of different types of filters, it’s important to understand the problem: Just how big and how numerous are the particles floating in the air inside most homes?

Dust particle size is typically measured in microns or micrometers, which are 0.0001 of a centimeter. In bright light, a 10-micron particle is just visible to the naked eye. The dust particles dancing in a sunbeam are probably larger than 10 microns in diameter, as are pollen, mold spores, and dust mites. Visible particles account for less than 2% of the particles floating around a typical house; the other 500,000 to 1 million particles per cubic foot are much smaller—usually in the 0.3- to 1-micron size range. These may stay suspended in the air for hours, days, or weeks at a time.

About the Author

Mark LaLiberte

Mark LaLiberte is the Chief Business Development Officer for Hayward Companies, based in Monterey, California. His goal is to bring innovation, technology, and sustainable processes to the Hayward Company and its collection of businesses. Our mission is to provide the dissemination of information about research, performance improvements and innovative ideas to a regional group of talented builders, architects and developers. It is Hayward Lumber's goal to deepen it’s position as a leading supplier of building materials. Mark has been involved in our industry for over 35 years. He is the co-founder of Construction Instruction, a Denver, CO based company dedicated to research and educational dissemination with 20 years of national and international experience. He helped develop the Ci App to provide easy access to thousands of videos, documents and links to assist the building industry in finding creditable information and innovative installation methods.

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