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The Role of
Filtration with Building Security in the Post 9/11 World;
Winter 2004 issue
of Air Media
Author(s):
H. E. Barney
Burroughs, CAFS, Building Wellness Consultancy, Inc.
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The Role of Filtration with Building
Security in the Post 9/11 World: Is Filtration the
"Silver Bullet?"
“9/11”
CHANGED THE WORLD.
The early reactions to the events surrounding
and following 9/11 were similar to the “Chicken Little” of
nursery rhyme folklore fame. As with “The sky is falling!”
shouts of “Shut off the Air Conditioning System!” spread panic
and concern among the building community. Conferences were
held by every conceivable group related to the building
industry; legislation was proposed at all levels; a new
Homeland Security Agency was created; a national alert system
was developed; and duct-tape sales surged. Further fuel came
from the SARS pandemic that demonstrated how far and how fast
a communicable disease can and will spread in our modern
world. Out of this frenzy, Filtration and Air Cleaning (FAC)
was recognized as an existing technology that could be the
potential “Silver Bullet” for occupant safety. This article is
excerpted from a presentation by the author at the 2003 NAFA
Annual Conference. It is designed to assist the air filtration
professional to aid their clients--the building management
team—regarding the application of FAC for the control of
airborne chemical/biological radiological, (CBR) threats in
their existing building.
BUT THE RULES HAVE NOT
CHANGED. The building security issue is complex and
critical, because it involves a wide array of factors and
components both internal and external to the building, with
FAC being but a part of the overall assessment and hardening
process. This abbreviated list provides the FAC professional
with a context for evaluating and assessing buildings for
application of FAC.
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Do no harm.
Like other professions dealing with the health and
welfare of the general public, we must follow
the first rule of response—do nothing that will result in
further harm, such as shutting off ventilation air to the
occupants of the building.
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The building is a
holistic entity consisting of a complex matrix of systems.
Like the human body, building performance is based
upon interconnected systems and interrelated functions.
When one component is “ill” or broken, the whole building
performance suffers. Understand the building performance
intent and behavior to ensure that an action and its related
reaction do not reduce building performance.
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Follow the air
pathway. Generally speaking, building air acts as a
non-compressible fluid. Thus, return/exhaust systems of a
building and related stack-effect(s) can become the dominant
controllers of the air direction, as well as the pathway of
unwanted contaminants. Air will follow small incremental
negative pressure differences to create the airborne
contaminant pathway. This is a critical since air capture
is vital to sustained contaminant control performance using
air filtration.
-
A 1 micron
particle is a 1 micron particle. Whether respirable
particles are Anthrax spores or condensation nuclei from
automobile exhaust or tobacco smoke, they both represent
health risks to occupants. They also behave the same when
responding to control tactics like dilution and filtration.
Thus, high efficiency filtration works equally well against
terrorism or pollution. One
micron is approximately 1/25,400th in
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Filtration is
fractional. Even High Efficiency Particulate Air, (HEPA)
filters and total retention gaseous filters have some small
fraction of breakthrough. The minimum efficiency reporting
value (MERV) designation, for example is an indication of
“fractional” efficiency. As filter efficiency increases,
contaminant exposure and risk to life decrease. In
recognition of this balance, the building owner’s risk and
vulnerability assessment should guide the degree of
acceptable filtration efficiency and resulting threat
reduction.
-
Assume nothing.
The Building Management System computer can, does, and will
provide inaccurate information about building performance.
Don’t assume anything that has not been investigated by
personal “line of sight” techniques and a thorough and
detailed “been there, done that” walk-through of the
building and visual inspection of the air distribution
pathway from entry to exit from the building.
-
One size does not
“fit-all”. Simple universal fixes are seldom
possible because of the wide variations of building
architectures, envelopes, HVAC systems, occupancies and
activities, building usage, and operating/maintenance
characteristics and practices. Thus, every building must be
evaluated “where-is: as-is” to assess the risk and
understand the needs and potential for enhanced protection
using FAC.
-
Good CBR
preparation is also good IAQ. Generally, those
things that are performed for Building Security/contaminant
protection will also bring about improved system
cleanliness, improved indoor air quality, and improved
system performance.
FILTRATION: AN IMPORTANT BUILDING SECURITY TOOL.
If filtration enhancement is supported by the owner’s risk
analysis, the following recommendations will aid in the
upgrading process in the existing building inventory.
- Understand the
air pathway. Prior to filter enhancement selection,
understand fully the air handling system capabilities,
access, and capacity; the nature, probable source(s), and
the probable pathway(s) of the contaminant(s) of concern;
and the likely FAC efficiency and capacity requirements.
- Evaluate the
filter retainer system. Prior to any filter modification
or upgrades, physically examine existing filter retention
banks, including slide track, retainers and access doors to
ensure proper fit, seal, and avoidance of by-pass.
Experience indicates from 5% to 25% air by-pass and leakage
between and around the filter retainer/tracking system is
typical in commercial air handlers.
- By-pass around or
between retainer frames, around filter cartridges, or
between filters and access panels must be repaired, caulked,
gasketed, and sealed in order to gain any additional benefit
of the efficiency enhancement.
- Gasketing must be
examined for integrity and resiliency, and flawed seal
surfaces repaired and/or upgraded to resilient gasketing
material, such as neoprene.
- Slide-in filter
units should be gasketed and cartridges sealed between
mating filter frame surfaces to avoid air by-pass between
modules due to frame distortion and dimensional variance.
- For maximum gasket
seal integrity and sustainability, order filter cartridges
with integral factory installed gasketing.
- Upgrade to
higher MERV filters. Dependent upon the constraints of
retainer system, sizing and available room, airflow
capacity, and pressure loss considerations, particulate
filtration should be upgraded to the highest MERV
designation that can be practically and physically
accomplished without system modifications.
- Upgrade 2”
pleats to higher efficiency media. Most 2” pleated
filters that demonstrate enhanced MERV 8-11designations can
operate within the existing AHU constraints of airflow,
size, and pressure drop. Though more expensive than lower
performing MERV selections, these upgrades are feasible with
relatively low additional operating cost premiums. Thus,
they can provide substantial improvement in particle control
without system modification and represent a cost-effective
way of enhancing air quality and cleanliness.
- Upgrade 4”
pleats to higher MERV efficiency media. When
front-loading retainer systems or 4” side-loading tracts are
available, upgrade to the highest MERV efficiency 4” pleat
for a cost-effective upgrade without system modification.
The deeper cartridge provides up to double the surface area
over 2” deep versions, which enhances both efficiency and
life cycle. Substantial operating savings are also accrued
due to decreased pressure drop, longer life cycle, and
cleanliness of the HVAC system.
- Upgrade to
highest efficiency media possible. When front-loading
retainer systems or 4” side-loading tracts are available,
and higher efficiency is desired, consider upgrading to 4”
deep minipleat MERV 13 or MERV 14 cartridges. Although
significantly higher first cost and higher pressure loss
than the lower efficiency conventional pleats, these filters
will provide higher efficiencies without physical system
modification, although some airflow restrictions may be
encountered.
- Upgrade current
bag/cartridges filters. If current filtration systems
consist of extended media bag or cartridge filters MERV 12
or less, upgrade to not less than MERV 13. If at the MERV 13
level, upgrade to MERV 14. If at MERV 14, consider upgrading
to MERV 16, which is a designation of low end HEPA
filtration (>95% on 0.3 micron sized particles). The MERV 16
filter is available in the mini-pleat configuration that
will provide substantial improvement in efficiency while
operating within the same pressure drop range (inches of
water gage) as the lower efficiency filters it replaces.
- Treating outdoor
air ventilation systems separately. If separate outdoor
ventilation systems or separate outdoor air filter banks are
installed, the related filter banks could be enhanced
independent of the overall air handling system. Higher MERV
designated filters should be employed selectively for
outdoor air treatment, which would minimize overall filter
cost and isolate/limit any system or filter bank
modifications requirements.
- Filter specialty
spaces. Especially engineered or modified systems could
provide air delivery selectively to selected spaces, such as
egress pathways or mailrooms. This would incorporate very
high efficiency filtration and molecular/gas phase air
cleaning equipment. Similarly, engineered self-contained
and self-powered filtration units could be positioned in a
by-pass mode to treat specific airstreams, such as outdoor
air, on demand. Such systems could operate independent of
the central HVAC system.
- Safe haven
areas. Such sanctuaries are possible but
difficult and costly to designate, isolate, design, install,
and maintain in most existing commercial buildings. The safe
haven or shelter-in-place response may, in fact, be contrary
to the appropriate safety measure, which may be to vacate
the building. However, critical spaces such as computer or
switch-gear rooms may warrant shelter-in-place techniques
including isolation and sealing, pressure barriers, HEPA and
Total Retention Gas Phase Filtration, emergency power,
personal protection gear, and related life support systems
such as food and water. The owner should be cautioned that
such spaces must rigorously maintained and sustained on a
24/7 state of readiness.
- Use filter
monitoring to drive change cycles. When extended
media filters are installed (MERV 6 and higher), air filter
gages or airflow monitoring stations should be employed to
monitor the pressure drop performance of the filter
cartridge. This is the most cost-effective way to assure the
correct life/change cycle for servicing filtration systems.
Visual inspection or arbitrary time-change cycles routinely
shorten the potential life cycle and LCCA value of filter
cartridges.
- Use Life Cycle
Cost Analysis (LCCA) in selecting filter alternatives.
Examine all aspects of the performance of filtration
equipment—not just efficiency. Life cycle and pressure drop
data are evaluation factors that are far more important
criteria than first cost. This is because some of the more
expensive filter configurations, such as the minipleat, cost
a great deal more initially than comparably efficient
filters. Yet they are far better LCCA values because they
last much longer than their competitors and operate at much
lower pressure drop.
- Use gas phase
filters where necessary. Gaseous/molecular filtration of
chemical constituents is more difficult to select and apply
to existing commercial buildings. There are no industry
consensus performance standards for gas phase filters
(although they are under development). The filter cartridges
required for acceptable extraction effectiveness and
capacity performance are large and bulky, heavy, restrictive
to airflow, and expensive relative to commercial particulate
filtration. The sorption media types currently commercially
available—activated carbon, treated carbon, and potassium
permanganate treated alumina pellets—require rigorous
maintenance. These sorbents and their containment module
configurations vary dramatically in performance, cost and
installation rigor. Further, their performance in
controlling contaminants is dependent upon airflow and bed
dwell time, the chemistry and concentration of the
contaminant/agent, and the chemistry of the sorbent. Thus,
sorption media selection, media bed depth, module face
velocity, module media content combine to influence the
overall air cleaner performance selection. For these
reasons, recommendations to retrofit gaseous filtration in
existing systems must be based on the owner’s risk
assessment evaluation. It is also possible that fractional
efficiency molecular filters would sufficiently reduce
contaminant concentrations to lower occupant Lethal Dose,
(LD) exposures to acceptable levels based on the owner’s
risk/exposure model.
- Specialty
filtration and air cleaning systems. It is feasible to
apply HEPA particulate filtration and total retention
gaseous filtration to existing systems, if engineering
modifications are performed to the air handling system to
accommodate for their physical and mechanical requirements.
Building managers should be urged to seek professional
guidance from filtration professionals in selecting and
applying the high-end filtration equipment, especially gas
phase filters as these specialized skills not widely
available in the engineering community.
In summary, filtration
is an essential component of building security because, as
stated by ASHRAE Past-President William Coad (2001/2), “9/11
raised the issue of the quality of the indoor environment from
a comfort and housekeeping issue to a health and safety
issue.” |