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Fresh Air Ventilation Systems, LLC Presents

HHT Presentation: Ventilation

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Presentation by Kurt Johnson, Fresh Air Ventilation Systems, on the importance of home ventilation at the Maine Asthma Coalition's Healthy Homes Trainings

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Page 1: HHT Presentation: Ventilation

Fresh Air Ventilation Systems, LLCPresents

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Ventilationfor Healthy Homes

Hosted by Kurt T. Johnson HRAI Certified Design and Installation of Residential

Mechanical Ventilation Systems Board Member of The Maine Indoor Air Quality Council

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Air is a transporter

3 Main pollutants which air moves

MoistureGases

Particles

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How does this affect our Health?

All of us breath constantlyEach day you take over 20,000 breaths and

breathe about 35 pounds of air.

Some of “the passengers” hurt us

Higher concentrations = Higher health threat

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How much fresh air is enough?

France = 1 complete air change per hour (ACH)Sweden = ½ ACHASHRAE (American Society of Heating Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers) = 1/3 ACH

DisclaimerASHRAE uses its best efforts to promulgate Standards and Guidelines forthe benefit of the public in light of available information and acceptedindustry practices. However, ASHRAE does not guarantee, certify, or assurethe safety or performance of any products, components, or systems tested,installed, or operated in accordance with ASHRAE’s Standards orGuidelines or that any tests conducted under its Standards or Guidelines willbe nonhazardous or free from risk.

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Three Converging Trends

• Construction

• Chemicals & other pollutants

• Couch Potatoes

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Changes in Construction

Old houses & buildings leaked a lot of air

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1973 Oil Embargo Changed it

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Note: As a result of the 1973 oil embargo, national energy conservation measures called for a reduction in the amount of outdoor air provided for ventilation from 15 to 5 cfm per person

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The Apple & Atari Arrive in the late 70’s

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Trend number 2

Americans spend 89% of our time indoors

6% traveling

5% outdoors

Klepeis, N.E., et al 2001

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#3 Demand for Easy of Life

Wall-to-wall carpet

Cleaners

Air fresheners

Pesticides

Personal care products

Much more

Dr. Richard Corsi, University of Texas

Global Production: Synthetic Organic Chemicals

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100150200250300350

1920 1940 1960 1980 2000

YearB

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ar

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Pollution Sources

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10

20

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Kitchen Sink Bathtub WashingMachine

Shower Dishwasher

Aver

age

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) AcetoneEthyl AcetateTolueneEthylbenzeneCyclohexane

Average Concentrations of VOCs

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0.150.2

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0.350.4

0.450.5

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Con

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ScentedUnscented

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What Happened in the 80s & 90s

Sick Building Syndrome – 30% of new or remodeled buildings have excessive complaints - source World Health Organization (WHO) 1984

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)% of all complaints relating to Indoor Air Quality 1978 = 0.5% 1990 = 52% Dramatic increase in Respiratory diseases

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More Bad News

The International Agency for Research on Cancer and the World Health Organization have concluded that 80% of all cancers are attributed to environmental rather than genetic factors, including exposure to carcinogenic chemicals, many of which are found in household cleaning products.

Is Vinyl Flooring Causing Autism?Scientists find "baffling" link between autism and the phthalates off-gassed by vinyl flooring, and other indoor air contaminants.

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Asthma becomes Nation EpidemicAsthma cases triple 1980 – 6.8 million 1996 – 14.6 million 1999 – 17.3 million 2005 – 22.2 million

Asthma Deaths also triple 1977 – 1,674 1998 – 5,438

Leading killer of young children!!!!

Asthma increase a mysteryApril 9, 2002 - source: by Ben Lieberman / National Review online

Costs 5.5 to 14.5% of family income to treat an asthmatic child

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Cleaning Chemical Studies

European women using spray cleaners 4 days a week were more than twice as likely to have asthma

Women working in domestic cleaning 46 - 109 % more likely to develop asthma

Source National Jewish Health Feb 2009

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Radon kills over 20,000 per year in the US

1 in 15 Homes have high radon levels at or above 4 (pCi/L)

Cancer risk at 4pCi/L = 1 in 44 In Maine, the average house is

at or above 4 pCi/L. Source EPA

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Mold and other Particulates

60,000 deaths each year caused by particulate matter source American Heart Association

Exposure to air pollution contributes to the development of cardiovascular diseases (heart disease and stroke).

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If so,..What can we do?

Does this concern you?

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2 Effective Strategies

Source Control & Ventilation

Limit the pollutants from coming in

Remove the ones that do get in

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VentilationNatural vs. Mechanical

We need to start thinking about a house as a system

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2 Main Driving Forces of Air

High Pressure to low pressure

Warm air rises Cold air drops (Stack effect)

Very Important Principle Air out is equal to air in

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Natural (wind & stack) & Mechanical

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What can be trusted to consistently work?

Natural Ventilation Wind is inconsistent Winter vs. Summer No Control 100% heat loss Tight house has few

holes and where?

Mechanical Ventilation Air flow Controllable Properly Designed will

vent every room Heat Recovery (with Air

Exchanger) up to 95% of heat from exhaust air

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Mechanical Ventilation is Superiorbut which one….

Exhaust only vs. Balanced

Which one is really effective when it comes to complete ventilation of entire house?

Does it remove the pollutants from all rooms?

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Very Important Questions?What room do you spend the most time in?

And your children?

“Bedtime is anything but pleasant for people with allergies and asthma since that’s very often the time when

symptoms worsen.” Source Amer. Lung Assoc.

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Formaldehyde found in baby cribs

• Many baby nursery furnishings emit formaldehyde.

• A baby sleeping in a nursery furnished with a high-emission crib and changing table may face an increased risk of developing allergies and/or asthma.

• Formaldehyde exposure can cause cancer in the long term. “… 2 ppb (parts per billion)”• 6 tested furnishings released “enough formaldehyde to contaminate an entire home with levels of formaldehyde greater than this threshold. Environment California 2008

This is just 1 of the many house components releasing formaldehyde and other chemicals

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Does Exhaust only really work?

• Bath and kitchen fans have been used for many years

• Do they really ventilate the bedrooms?

• Are they effective ventilating every room?

Let’s see….

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Exhaust Ventilation

Exhausts air in bathroom and kitchen.

No control of fresh air May not be used properly Depressurizes building May cause back drafting May pull pollutants in from

garage 100% heat loss Can be noisy

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Air Moves from High to Low PressureSince air out is replaced by air coming back in….

So… Where does the air come in?.... Front door Basement Garage Flue Other not in use vents

Where does it go? . . . Right to the low pressure (bathroom, kitchen)

Question? How does the bedroom get fresh air?

We really don’t know…. Because every house is different. This method only hopes to ventilate the bedroom but there is no direct control. This is really a “hope so” method.

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Designed and Balanced Ventilation

• Ventilates all rooms• Controls air flow• Heat recovery up to 95%• Recovers bath heat loss• In Winter, can control humidity• Programmable• Low elec. cost as low as $3 per month (ECM motors)

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Types of Ventilators

HRV (Heat Recovery Ventilators)

• Heat recovery up to 95%

• Removes all moisture within exhaust air

• Good for colder climates with excess indoor humidity

ERV (Energy Recovery Ventilator)

• Heat recovery up to 95%

• “Bounces” some moisture back to its source

• Good from warm humid climates or dry houses

•No condensation drain

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How Air Exchangers Work

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A core with lots of surface area transfers heat

Pollutants and moisture are removed and heat is recovered

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Ventilation and Filtration

• captures 99.97% of all dust and particles even those as small as 0.3 micron (150th

of a human hair)

• Removes moisture and gases

For best quality airwhole house HEPA air exchanger

Other filters available•Pleated•Charcoal•Electrostatic

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All of the data presented so far has been from houses built based on the changes of

the late 70’s and 80’s. Not very tight.What will be the consequences of the latest

changes with the whole country going GREEN?

Maine’s Uniform Building and Energy code

Cash for Caulkers

Federal Tax Credits for Energy Efficiency$5 billion to weatherize more than 1 million homes

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What is a “tight” house?

“Home Building Envelope Air Leakage Area. The median ACH50 (air changes per hour at50 pascals) for the homes in this study was 4.8 air changes per hour, which compares to a

median of 5.2 air changes per hour for a group of homes built since 1992 and 8.6 air

changes per hour for a group of homes built before 1987. New Californian homes are generally being built tighter, but not exceptionally tight,

like those found in colder climate regions.”

Pre 1987 = 8.6 ACH50Since 1992 = 5.2 ACH50

2003-07 = 4.8 ACH50 (Calif. Study Houses)

In Maine, If an energy auditor tests your home and it is at or above 3.5 ACH50 you will be told that you have plenty of natural ventilation and

that you do not need any additional.

Page 42: HHT Presentation: Ventilation

Signs and Symptoms of Air Pollution

Headaches Congestion Watery Eyes Coughing Shortness of Breath Dizziness Lethargy Fever Digestive Problems

Moisture on Windows Black mold around

windows and low or high on walls

High radon readings Poor Combustion Flue Back Drafts Chronic Stale Smell

effects are similar to those from colds or other viral diseases

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Dr. Richard CorsiProfessor, Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental EngineeringPresident of Indoor Air 2011http://www.esi.utexas.edu/outreach/ols/lectures/Corsi/

U. S. Dept of Environmental Protection www.epa.gov/iaq

California Air Resource Board www.arb.ca.gov

American Lung Association www.lungusa.org

Indoor Environment Connections www.ieconnections.com

World Health Organization www.who.int

Venmar Ventilation www.venmar.ca

With special thanks to the following contributors & sources of information

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Fresh Air Ventilation Systems, LLC155 Spring St.Lewiston, ME 04240207 [email protected]

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