Abstract
Heat recovery ventilation (HRV) system is emerging as a sustainable technology to reduce human exposure to air pollutants in residential buildings. However, there is a lack of information on the HRV system performance for controlling both indoor-generated and outdoor-generated particles in a residential building. To fill this knowledge gap, we conducted field monitoring of indoor airborne particles with two representative HRV system operating modes (ventilation and circulation modes) in a full-scale residential testbed. The results reveal that the filter efficiency, airflow rate, and filter bypass factor of the HRV system play important roles in indoor particle concentrations. The indoor/outdoor concentration ratio is reduced by 72%–92% when operating the HRV system. For both circulation and ventilation modes, the bypass factor is crucial for the particle removal performance of the HRV system. A 20% filter bypass factor leads to up to a 50% increase in indoor exposure to outdoor-originated and indoor-generated PM2.5 compared to the no-bypass scenario. Although circulation mode performed better than ventilation mode, both operating modes with a minimal bypass factor can effectively remove particles generated from indoor emission sources (e.g., incense stick burning and bacon pan frying). The study results suggest that HRV system can reduce human exposure to indoor-generated particles by 56%–90% and particle control performance hinges upon minimizing HRV filter bypass.
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