Many people believe
that measures which
improve thermal
efficiency or air-tightness
in buildings increase
indoor pollution levels.
Not so, say the authors of
Residential Indoor Air
Quality & Energy
Efficiency, who argue that
sources of pollutants,
rather than ventilation rates, are
the major cause of indoor pollution.
The authors present their case in
three sections, first discussing the
basics of air infiltration and natural
vs. mechanical ventilation, next
surveying the problems arising
from a wide array of pollutants,
and finally describing strategies for
monitoring and controlling these
pollutants.
Early chapters give a breakdown
of infiltration sources, explaining
why natural ventilation isn't
sufficient to control pollution and
how pollutant concentrations relate
directly to the rate of supply (but
inversely to the rate of removal).
The authors compare several types
of ventilation