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Finally, an air filtration podcast for people who agree that #cleanairmatters! Listen for interviews with influential people, best practices and education in air filtration.

NAFA strives to be The Source for Expertise, Education and Best Practices in Air Filtration. NAFA publishes the Guide to Air Filtration, several best practice guidelines, and maintains several certification programs for individuals to educate and elevate themselves in the profession. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nafahq/support

Talking Air Filtration National Air Filtration Association

    • 비즈니스

Finally, an air filtration podcast for people who agree that #cleanairmatters! Listen for interviews with influential people, best practices and education in air filtration.

NAFA strives to be The Source for Expertise, Education and Best Practices in Air Filtration. NAFA publishes the Guide to Air Filtration, several best practice guidelines, and maintains several certification programs for individuals to educate and elevate themselves in the profession. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nafahq/support

    Recent Updates and Upgrades to ASHRAE SSPC 52.2

    Recent Updates and Upgrades to ASHRAE SSPC 52.2

    Recent Updates and Upgrades to ASHRAE SSPC 52.2 - SSPC 52.2 has made many updates and upgrades over the last few years to improve the standard. Many of those updates are meant to increase the repeatability and reproducibility of intra and inter-lab test results. Recent upgrades include an optional method to determine filter efficiency in removing or inactivating airborne viruses and bacteria. The addition of a Particulate Matter (PM) calculated filter efficiency by using currently available data points from the 52.2 test. This session will summarize in detail all the updates and upgrades and touch on what is next for 52.2.


    View the slides from Mr. McGrath's presentation:

    https://amped.egnyte.com/dl/ACqyqKb6fQ

    For detailed show notes, read below and
    use the timestamps to navigate the episode:

    [1:50]
    Mr. McGrath begins the overview of recent 52.2 upgrades in the last five years with the MERV Table for better progressions and shedding data for testing filters. He then moves on to updates for relative humidity and narrowing down the range of percentages. For the optical particle counter, updates were more terminology-related.

     

    [5:11]
    Mr. McGrath explains the goal of repeatability and reproducibility with graphs outlining how filters are tested for efficiency across different labs. Improvement should revolve around the grouping of data points for the particle diameter.

     

    [5:43]
    Mr. McGrath introduces the most recent project, Research Project 1784, in which samples were filtered across multiple labs to determine whether lab testing standards vary. These results will assess changes in ASHRAE standard 52.2.

     

    [7:37] Mr. McGrath examines the removal of MERV 17 and what led to that reference removal, as well as MERV 18, 19 and 20 references.

     

    [10:04] Recent Upgrades to 52.2 in the last year or two, including the addition of PM 52.2 filter efficiency based on a flat distribution curve and using E-values.

     

    [13:31] The recent COVID-19 pandemic led to
    changes in ASHRAE 52.2 Addendum C, which helps collect filter efficiency data for viruses and bacteria. Calculations were created to determine the presence
    of the organism and its ability to grow. Variety in organisms detected is still needed due to organism resistance.

     

    [17:00] Mr. McGrath concludes with current
    52.2 pursuits that revolve around unifying terminology for testing and parameters for checking devices. Research project 1784 is ongoing, and its results will lead to new upgrading projects.


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    • 21분
    What’s so Important about Cleaning the Air? A "Poolside" Chat with Bob Burkhead

    What’s so Important about Cleaning the Air? A "Poolside" Chat with Bob Burkhead

    A poolside chat with Bob Burkhead about lessons learned from testing, developing, and using air filters - Moderated by Tom Justice. View the slides from Mr. Burkhead's presentation:
    For detailed show notes, read below and use the timestamps to navigate the episode:
    [5:38] Bob Burkhead and Tom Justice explore the trends for testing products for filtration. Indoor air quality is more than just filters. The issues are efficiency degradation, chamber testing, and  ISO 17025 Lab certification.
    [10:30] Mr. Burkhead discusses efficiency
    degradation in detail, using an efficiency over time graph to illustrate a scenario involving filtration in a surgery room.  
    [14:37] Mr. Burkhead describes chamber testing and variations in techniques assembled for the ideal filtration
    application. He compares a single-pass testing method to a multi-pass testing method. A new room air testing standard involving a recirculating loop is currently being worked on.  
    [17:42] Mr. Burkhead concludes with the value of ISO 17025 Lab Certification, which provides validation and credentials for overall operation and focuses on continuous improvement. The structured decision rules and methodology should include the rest of the world.
    [22:29] Q & A session with Mr. Burkhead.




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    • 40분
    Low Cost Indoor Air Quality Sensors

    Low Cost Indoor Air Quality Sensors

    This episode is from NAFA’s Tech Seminar, recorded in April 2022. Our speaker was Dr. Jordan Clark from The Ohio State University.  

    As in many engineering problems, the control of our indoor environments is rapidly moving from a prescriptive,

    rule-of-thumb paradigm to an entirely data-driven paradigm enabled by the Internet of things. The first step in such a shift is generating data reliably and cheaply with low-cost sensing.  To this end, we will look at several studies of the performance of low-cost airborne pollutant sensors and discuss their strengths and weaknesses and

    application domain. Finally, we will look at some things we can do with these sensors once they are robust and reliable.

    View the slides from

    ⁠Dr. Jordan Clark's presentation⁠.

    For detailed show notes, read below and use the timestamps to navigate the episode:

    [2:08] Dr. Clark describes the engineering controls for air filtration in buildings. Prescribed ventilation rates and filter rates mean releasing quantities of air and waiting for feedback. We don’t have performance-based metrics or real-time feedback to avoid high costs of money and energy. An aging electrical infrastructure can’t keep up with grid peak times in buildings across all sectors and homes. 

    [5:07] Dr. Clark examines the evolution of prescribed air rates within Standard 62 over time from an ASHVE article. In the late 19th century, the germ theory was developed, starting the hygiene revolution that influenced the implementation of natural air ventilation. In the middle of the 20th century, central air conditioning and heating were adopted and costly.

    The energy crisis at the beginning of the 1980s caused the ventilation rate to decrease. Now, the ventilation rate is prescribed per person per floor area. What we should expect in the future post-pandemic is still ambiguous. One idea is to treat buildings like hospitals to reduce the

    transmission of viruses. We require a reevaluation of ventilation rates and consumption of energy.

    [9:39] Dr. Clark reviews the US Department of Energy's depiction of a grid-interactive, efficient building of the future. However, there is no mention of air quality, and that is what Dr. Clark is working on.

    [10:38] The first step to getting that data is using the hardware to measure quality in real-time.

    Air quality sensors constantly evolve, but the current focus is on low-cost particle sensors, which cost about $1,000 USD. Dr. Clark reviews the anatomy of this device.

    [15:15] Dr. Clark describes his performance testing as field testing with naturally occurring particle sources like gravel roads and highways. Other sources were created in the form of essential home functions like cooking. A comparison of devices and measured the sensor detection of events and if the sensor can return to baseline after

    an event. Other tasks included quantitating exposure to events, averaging times of performance, determining the functional range for sensors, and determining correlation and linearity among models.

    [23:25] Sensor performance based on sources is evaluated and found to be insensitive to building temperature. Further analysis showed that this temperature defect was a light and optical defect. Sensors are, however, significantly sensitive to humidity. Dr. Clark expands on performance as a function of size, which was evaluated to show calibration for a specific particle size. His takeaways from his research and literature help make predictions on the drift or long-term changes in performance.

     

    [31:11] Dr. Clark concludes with gas sensors and total volatile organic compound (TVOC) detection. A total VOC sensor in low-cost particle sensor devices has limitations compared to a colorimetric Formaldehyde Sensor. The predictive abilities examined using machine learning and low-cost sensors didn't lead to any concrete conclusions.

     [36:08 ] Q & A session with Dr. Clark.


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    • 39분
    Airplane Air Quality & Air Filtration

    Airplane Air Quality & Air Filtration

    In this recorded conference session (Tech Seminar 2022), David Space (former Boeing engineer) spoke about the airplane operating environment, how an airplane Environmental Control System (ECS) works, air filtration advancements over time, and how the air distribution system and airplane design features control for air quality and spread of disease.

    Review the slides: ⁠https://amped.egnyte.com/dl/LEPxPrUWAK⁠

    For detailed show notes, read below and use the timestamps
    to navigate the episode: 

    [2:01] David describes the airplane operating environment and how an environmental control system has multiple functions, such as maintaining cabin pressure anti-icing systems, cargo heat, and ventilation. 

    [3:00] David describes how an ECS system continuously circulates outside air when it enters the engine and into a mixing chamber, where it is mixed with recirculated air. This 50/50 mix is distributed to the cabin and exits the airplane through valves.  

    [4:33] David begins his review of the history of air filtration and advancements in aircraft with the Boeing Stratoliner, the first aircraft to implement air recirculation in 1945. After that, NASA research led to the application of HEPA filters for recirculated air, allowing for less fuel waste without compromising the quality of the cabin air. David Space participated in this research in 2002 and expanded on carbon air purification and filter capture methods for HEPA research in 2015 at the Lawrence Berkeley National Labs.  

    [7:28] David Space analyzes a graph comparing airplane filtration to filtration in other modes of transportation and in environments such as hospitals and office buildings.  

    [8:18] What do the latest statistics show on the spread of disease? The industry was hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic; international flights dropped by 75% in 2019, and few reports on the spread of COVID during flights were available. 

    [9:50] The Department of Defense used United Airlines for an eight-day study with four days on the ground and four days in flight. Mannequins released particles in the air with simulated coughing and breathing mechanisms. Decay, also known as how soon the particles leave the cabin, occurred much quicker due to a higher air exchange rate. 

    [15:21] David compares the ASHRAE 1262 in-flight research to another study he was a part of with American Airlines on the factors that affect comfort for passengers while in flight. They took this data to the Technical University of Denmark for more human subject research on air quality. They found that air purification could raise humidity and lower gaseous contaminants. David’s research continues at Rutgers to find that bio effluents are the primary contaminant due to the high density of people. 

    [21:17]
    David presented actual measurements collected during flights across the Boeing fleet, indicating that the 787 has lower volatile organic compounds. The FAA adopted prescriptive regulations for ventilation systems, but David believes performance-based regulations would be better. He
    suggested implementing filtration systems to handle particulate matter and gaseous contaminants, which would improve passenger comfort and reduce engine emissions.


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    • 25분
    Best Practices and Guidelines: Filtration for Continuing Care Retirement Communities

    Best Practices and Guidelines: Filtration for Continuing Care Retirement Communities

    NAFA recently published the Best Practices and Guidelines document, Filtration for Continuing Care Retirement Communities.

    Patrick Rosenthal, CAFS (lead author of this NAFA Guideline) will educate HVAC and air filtration professionals on what facility managers need to know about clean air in continuing care retirement communities.

    Download 2023 Best Practices and Guidelines Webinar Filtration for Continuing Care Retirement Communities Slide Deck

    Download Filtration for Continuing Care Retirement Communities Best Practices and Guideline

    About NAFA Air Filtration Best Practice Guidelines:
    What’s the difference between ASHRAE has Standard 52.2 and NAFA’s Best Practices and Guidelines?

    The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) has minimum standards for air filtration.

    Organizations like the National Air Filtration Association (NAFA) go beyond these minimum standards. NAFA publishes best practices and guidelines for several facility applications based on the experience and expertise of their membership, as well as current mandates and research provided by governmental and scientific communities.

    HVAC and air filtration professionals should use NAFA’s Best Practices and Guidelines as a tool to educate their clients on how to protect their facilities’ occupants.


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    • 47분
    Healthy Buildings: How Indoor Spaces Drive Performance and Productivity

    Healthy Buildings: How Indoor Spaces Drive Performance and Productivity

    This week’s episode is a May 2021 presentation from Dr. Joseph G. Allen.

    Dr. Joseph G. Allen is an associate professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and co-author of Healthy Buildings: How Indoor Spaces Drive Performance and Productivity.

    Dr. Allen directs the Healthy Buildings program at Harvard, where he created ‘the 9 Foundations of a Healthy Building’. He is also a Certified Industrial Hygienist and Deputy Director of the Harvard Center for Education and Research on Occupational Health and Safety.

    He has also been translating science to the business community and the general public, publishing more than 10 op-eds in leading newspapers and translating science into actionable tips for the public.

    Enjoy his presentation and a lively Q&A!


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    • 42분

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