|
One sure path to energy efficiency
in houses is eliminating air leaks. If you cut down
the amount of air that has to be heated and cooled,
you cut your utility bill substantially. But plugging
up all those air leaks means less fresh air inside and
this has brought on other problems.
One of the first to be identified
was elevated concentrations of volatile organic compounds
in the air. Commonly called VOC's, these compounds are
used in the manufacture of the many synthetic building
products used in most new houses today, including carpeting,
flooring, paint, cabinetry, countertops, and the structural
framework itself. Hundreds of off-gassing VOC's have
been identified, but the one that has captured the most
attention is formaldehyde. It is a potent eye and nose
irritant and causes respiratory effects. It is also
classified by the US Government Environmental Protection
Agency as a probable human carcinogen.
In response to the concerns raised
by health officials and the public over the last fifteen
years, manufacturers of some building materials and
furnishings have altered their chemical formulations,
significantly reducing the amount of VOC's off gassing
from their products.
A
brand new house will still have a significant amount
of VOC's in the air because the rate at which the VOC's
off-gas is highest initially. This phenomenon accounts
for the "new house smell" that most new house
buyers experience. Delaying a move-in and airing out
a house by opening all the windows and running all the
exhaust fans will benefit the occupants, even if this
is done for only two days, advised John Girman, Director
of the Center for Analysis and Studies for the Indoor
Environmental Division of the US Government Environmental
Protection Agency.
Continuing to keep the windows open
and ventilating the house for several day to several
weeks, if weather permits, can also be beneficial, added
Al Hodgson of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
in Berkeley, California, who has been studying indoor
air quality for the last 18 years.
After the first month or so, the rate
at which the VOC's off gas from building materials may
fall off, but Hodgson's research indicates that the
off-gassing phenomenon will continue at a slow and steady
pace for months or even years. Hodgson measured the
indoor air quality in eleven new, but unoccupied houses
one to two months after their completion. Some were
monitored over a period of about nine months. Overall
he found that the concentrations of VOC's in the houses
were not "alarming," although the concentrations
of some compounds were high enough to produce an odor.
The levels of formaldehyde were too low to have a smell,
but high enough to cause discomfort in some individuals.
Although the level of VOC's in new
houses does fall off over time, buyers can reduce it
at the outset by their selection of finishes. Hodgson's
research has shown while carpets are generally low emitters
of VOC's, a reasonable quality, medium-grade, nylon,
certified green label carpet may emit less than the
basic grade carpet that most builders offer as standard.
Installing the carpet with tack strips instead of an
adhesive eliminates a potential VOC source altogether.
Synthetic fiber carpet padding emits less than the rebonded
padding that most production builders provide.
Hodgson's "certified green label
carpet" refers to the green and white Carpet and
Rug Institute emission test sticker found on carpeting
that meets their emission standard. Their testing program
was established after sensational stories about "killer
carpets" appeared in newspapers and TV news programs
in the early nineties. In a New England lab, mice were
exposed to carpet samples and subsequently died. Scientists
in other labs including the EPA were never able to replicate
these results and the reason for the mice's demise remains
unclear.
After the Carpet and Rug Institute
started its carpet-testing program, it raised the emission
standards, which has further reduced carpet emissions.
Even so, carpeting can still have an odor that makes
people think that they are being exposed to something
awful, Hodgson observed.
Vinyl flooring is a stronger emitter
than carpet, but it too should not be a cause for concern,
Hodgson said.
The oil-based alkyd and water-based
latex paints used in most houses are another source
of VOC's. The alkyds, which create a harder, more washable
surface, are usually used for bathrooms, kitchens, and
the trim around doors, windows and baseboards. They
produce a terrible smell and emit hundreds of VOC compounds,
but these are almost entirely dissipated after about
48 hours, said John Chang, of the EPA labs in Triangle
Park, North Carolina. The latex paints have a different
smell and emit only four or five VOC compounds, but
these continue to off gas for days and weeks after the
paint is dry. "Low VOC" latex paints are now
available, but some of these emit formaldehyde and buyers
should check the paint emission data, he advised.
Hodgson is currently studying the
man-made wood products used in residential homes
because most of them contain formaldehyde, and formaldehyde
concentrations in the indoor air of new houses have
been found to be higher than in other building types.
Large quantities of these wood products including cabinet
materials, doors, door and window trim and baseboards
are found in the finished space of new houses. Man-made
wood products are also used extensively in their structural
framework. Hodgson is looking at the emissions of formaldehyde
and VOC's from each product as well as the amount of
exposed surface of each product. He is finding that
bare surfaces of wood products can have relatively high
emissions, but that surfaces with laminate and vinyl
finishes generally have low emissions.
In some cases, products that are considered
to be low emitters are turning out to be a significant
source of VOC's when viewed in the context of the whole
house, Hodgson said. For example, formaldehyde and other
VOC's given off by the oriented strand board or plywood
used for the subfloor in most new houses today are low
when calculated on a square foot or a per piece basis.
But Hodgson's research is showing that when the total
area of the subflooring in a typical house is taken
into account, it can be a significant VOC source and
that the overlying carpet and carpet padding are not
effective barriers.
Other research in indoor air quality
in new houses has focused on the problem of underventilation.
Until the last 20 years or so, mechanical engineers
could reasonably assume that between air leaks and occupants
opening the windows, everyone was getting plenty of
fresh air. But as houses have become tighter, less outside
air is penetrating through air leaks and with air conditioning;
no one opens the windows in the summer anymore.
To rectify this situation, the American
Society for Heating, Refrigeration, and Air Conditioning
Engineers, commonly known as ASHRAE, proposes that mechanical
ventilation be required in all new houses, as it is
in most commercial and office buildings. The engineers
have not dictated how this should be accomplished, and
the desired ventilation rate varies with the size of
the house and the number of bedrooms. For a 2,400 square-foot
house with four bedrooms, for example, the proposed
rate would be .35 changes per hour. At this rate, all
the air in the house would be replenished every threehours.
Some homebuilders have suggested that
ASHRAE's ventilation proposal could add $1,500 to $6,000
to the cost of a new house, but ASHRAE's proposal could
be easily and inexpensively done. One continuously running
100 cfm bathroom exhaust fan that is exhausted to the
outside would do the job for a 2,400 square foot house
and this modification would cost only $75 to $100 more
than the exhaust fan and venting that the builder would
already be installing in the bathroom, said Max Sherman,
also of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, who
has studied indoor air for 20 years. Putting a smaller
continuously running fan in each bathroom is a more
expensive solution, but it would distribute the fresh
air more evenly.
The ASHRAE proposal includes a sound
recommendation for the continuously running fan because
occupants turn fans off when they're too noisy. The
dedicated exhaust fan should have a sound level of one
sone or less so that it won't disturb a household at
night when the ambient noise level is low.
Relocating the air-handling unit from
the garage to some other place in the house would also
improve indoor air quality, Sherman said. In some parts
of the country such as Florida and California, houses
do not have basements and the air handling equipment
is often put in the garage. Unfortunately the ducts
for the system often leak so that if a car engine is
left running for any length of time, homeowners can
unwittingly introduce carbon monoxide into their living
areas. |