Air Quality Guide

National Air Quality Index Section


 


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Air-Quality
Email:
First Name:



Main National Air Quality Index sponsors


 

Latest National Air Quality Index Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on National Air Quality Index!



Newest Best Sellers


Welcome to Air Quality Guide

 

National Air Quality Index Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

Indoor Air Quality and Energy Efficiency Go Hand in Hand

from:


If you wish to improve your indoor air quality and energy efficiency at the same time, you may want to follow some basic rules that will do both of these simultaneously.

If you do whatever you can to prevent cold drafts you will limit the amount of airborne allergens entering your home from the outside. By preventing cold drafts, you will be helping your indoor air quality and energy efficiency by limiting the loss of heat in the winter or cool room air in the heat of the summer. At the same time, you are limiting outside irritants as well as toxic particles that may be suspended in the atmosphere around the outside of your home. If you circulate the warm and cool air inside your home, you will not be allowing your rooms to become stuffy and stale as you are preventing odors. You will also be able to control the humidity in your home. By controlling the humidity in your home, you will be able to prevent mold and the need to use a dehumidifier, which can be very costly to run.

You will be far ahead with indoor air quality and energy efficiency if you are able to create a sanctuary inside your home away from airborne microbes that may include anthrax, botulism, small pox, toxic gasses, and radioactive particles that are released by terrorists or by accident.

A simple air leakage test can be the first step towards indoor air quality and energy efficiency. The air leakage test can be done with a fan in and outer doorway. After the fan has been placed in the outer doorway you will find that the amount of air flowing through the fan is equal to the air flowing through any leaks in the shell of the building’s construction.

If you use small cool white smoke puffs during the air leakage test you will be able to identify the areas where insects, dust, mold spores, pollen and any possible cold drafts may be entering your home.

In most new home construction as well as existing buildings there may be gaps, cracks and holes in the outer shell construction that can total as much if not more than 100 to 300 square inches. These holes in the construction of your home’s shell are open all the time. If you have a ducted air circulation system in your home it may be creating a significant level of pressure that can drive air through the cracks, crevices, holes and leaks between the interior and exterior.


Other National Air Quality Index related Articles

Air Quality Improvements
Indoor Air Quality And Energy Efficiency
Poor Air Quality
Air Quality Index
Home Air Quality

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


National Air Quality Index Specific links

National Air Quality Index News

Heat, smog lead to air warnings

PARKER COUNTY — Fort Worth and communities around it are under a Level Orange air quality warning, issued by the National Weather Service Thursday. Level Orange warnings are given out when ozone pollution is predicted to reach unhealthy levels, usually between 101 and 150 on the Air Quality Index.

Read more...


Springfield Air Quality Index Elevated To Moderate

The Springfield Greene County Health Department is urging folks with breathing problems to stay indoors this afternoon. Smoke from two large prescribed burns in the Mark Twain National Forest in southern Missouri could enter the Springfield area late this afternoon.

Read more...


Butte flunks air quality standard

An advocacy group for clean air left Butte plenty of room to improve its air quality.

Read more...


The air we breathe: Air quality in the Valley

Dirty air has been an issue in the Valley since the booming steel industry. In 2012 the same problem still faces the region. In the American Lung Association's 2012 State of the Air report, the Valley made the top 25 list of most polluted areas not once, but twice. "We had two metropolitan areas on that list. The Weirton-Steubenville area and the Wheeling area," said Larry English of the West ...

Read more...


Lois Henry: FAIL: the Lung Association's air quality ratings

To all you people out there with your hair on fire because the American Lung Association ahhhgain gave our air an "F," please, douse yourselves and think for a minute.

Read more...