Ventilation Energy and Environmental Technology
                                     from VEETECH Ltd. 
             Updated 8th December  2010

Prepare to be Sick in your Airtight Home! 

PHPAIDA 
For Calculating Ventilation Rates and Air Infiltration
PHPTOXICGAS 
For calculating the rate of ingress of toxic pollutants into a building
PHPCO2 
Determine ventilation rates from CO2 concentration and number of occupants
Tutorial Section Now Updated 
NEW! phpthermal a simple to use transient and steady state thermal model 

 

Home
PHPAIDA Tutorial
Office Case Studies
Guide to Ventilation
Air Quality Reservoir
Outdoor Air Quality
Indoor Air Quality
Vent Strategies
Pollutant Mitigation
Carbon Dioxide
Metabolic CO2 Says It All
Bedroom Ventilation
Bathroom Ventilation
Ventilation and Energy
Filtration
'Passive' Cooling
Sustainable Cooling
The Tutorials
Contacting VEETECH
Privacy Statement
The Author

 

Preventing Outdoor Pollution Indoors – Building Airtightness as a Barrier to Pollution Ingress

[See also Air Quality Reservoir]

Outdoor pollution enters buildings through leakage openings and via the ventilation system. Unfortunately harmful urban pollutants, such as fine particles and traffic fumes, are the most difficult to trap by filtration and, hence, enter the building unabated. Preventive measures include:

  • Implementing clean air regulations;
  • Avoiding the entrainment of pollutants from obvious local sources; 
  • Reducing the ventilation rate during transient periods of local pollution.

European and UK outdoor air quality directives are evolving rapidly (see http://www.mistral.co.uk/cleanair/info.htm), while the UK CIBSE publication TM21 “Minimising pollution at air intakes” reviews the role of air intake location in relation to local sources of pollution.

The Figure on the right illustrates how the building itself may be used as a temporary barrier to the ingress of outdoor pollution. This approach is effective provided that:

  • The building is substantially air tight;

  • The source of outdoor pollutant is transient (e.g. rush hour traffic);

  • The building is not densely occupied or is, itself, producing indoor pollutants [See Air Quality Reservoir].

   

 

© Copyright VEETECH Ltd. 2006. Content not be reproduced without the permission of VEETECH Ltd.

The above Figure is derived by applying standard dilution equations (for example, as described in British Standard 5925:1991) to a 10m2 segment of floor area in a room with a ceiling height of 2.5m. 

For each segment, ventilation rates of 0, 1 and 8 litres/second (L/s) are applied from the onset of increased outdoor pollution (i.e. at time = 0 seconds). 

For a perfectly sealed building, in which no ventilation is applied, it is clear that the outdoor pollutant does not penetrate and hence the building remains free of such pollution. 

At a residual ventilation rate of 1 L/s (e.g. typical of natural infiltration in a fairly airtight building) the indoor pollutant rises to just under 0.15 (i.e. 15%) of the outdoor value after a period of an hour. 

At the 8 L/s rate (i.e. typical of the ventilation needed for a single occupant) the indoor pollution level reaches 70% of the outdoor value after 1 hour.

CAUTION: The maximum period for which a building ventilation system can safely be shut down is limited by the amount of pollution being generated in a space. [See Air Quality Reservoir for examples]
 

 

           
Guide to Energy 
Efficient Ventilation
Copies Available
Buy Online

The International
Journal of Ventilation 
Moves to Dedicated Web-Site  
IJV Now Online

 

This  Site has been created and is operated by  VEETECH Ltd. Registered in England  Director: Martin W. Liddament .