10 Natural Air-Purifying Hacks for Your Home
Homes are a lot more energy-efficient than they used to be, and that's partly because we've gotten a lot better at making them airtight. That's a good thing, but it also means that indoor air quality has become a very real concern. We spend a lot of time in our living spaces (that's what they're for!), and the air inside is often worse than the air outside. Here are a few of our favorite hacks to help you fight back and breathe easier in your personal space.
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1-Say Goodbye to Chemical Air Fresheners
- One of the cruel ironies of indoor air quality is that sometimes, it's the very products we choose to improve the air that cause the damage.
- Most of the "air fresheners" you'll find at the supermarket or drugstore do nothing to improve the air.
- Instead, they simply mask underlying odors through the use of powerful (and usually chemical-based) scents. Spray deodorizers add propellants to the mix as well.
- If you want pleasant aromas in your house, a few drops of essential oil or an oil diffuser is a more natural option.
2-Lose the Harsh Cleaning Products
- Keeping things clean (and especially preventing mold and removing it quickly when it appears) is the best way to tackle air-quality issues at their source.
- Unfortunately, sometimes the cleaning products themselves are responsible for heavy fumes and lingering chemical buildup that can affect your indoor air quality.
- You may or may not be especially sensitive to them, but you're not doing your lungs any favors.
- Instead of commercial products, try natural DIY cleaning solutions made with everyday ingredients like lemon, vinegar and baking soda, or if you really love pleasant scents, use essential oils.
3-Open a Window
- Sometimes, the easiest answer is the best.
- If you want your indoor air to be fresh and pure, why not just open a window and let in some fresh, pure outside air?
- Obviously, there are limitations to this approach.
- It assumes your outside air is clean and fresh and that it's not too cold to have a window open, but when it works, it works well.
- If you want the same benefits without actually leaving a window open, you can install frame-mounted "trickle vents" over your existing windows or upgrade to windows that include a vent the next time you do some work on your home.
4-The Box Fan Hack
- If you'd love to have your window open but the outside air isn't necessarily of the best quality, you can improvise an air purifier for your window using an ordinary box fan.
- Choose a square 20 x 20-inch box fan and tape a high-quality 20 x 20-inch furnace filter to the intake side of the fan, taking good care to seal it all the way around.
- Put it in your window and seal the space around the fan with some combination of cardboard, plastic, tape or whatever else works for you.
- Leave the fan on low or medium (it will burn out quickly on high) and enjoy filtered air where you need it.
5-Tame Your Candle Habit
- There's something deeply satisfying about a bit of open flame, whether it's an outdoor campfire, an indoor fireplace or a simple candle.
- If candles are your favorite way to create indoor ambiance, you may not be doing your air quality any favors.
- Most candles are made with paraffin, a petroleum product, and while they burn relatively cleanly, they also bring some unpleasant hydrocarbons to your inside air (and lungs).
- Indulging less is one option, or better yet, you can switch to beeswax.
- Not only is it clean but it will generate negative ions that help actively clean your air.
6-Cook With High-Temperature Oils
- Your kitchen is another source of impurities in the air.
- Not only can misplaced or overlooked food breed foul-smelling mold and bacteria but the actual oil with which you cook can be a significant culprit.
- All oils have a point at which they begin to smoke and break down – called, logically enough, the smoke point – and even after you've quieted the smoke alarm, those sooty particles will hang in the air for a long time.
- Avoid them entirely by using oils that can handle the heat.
- Canola and safflower oil are great for ordinary frying, while grapeseed oil and avocado oil will handle extra-high temperatures.
7-Clean Your Exhaust Vents
- Your kitchen and bath are important battlegrounds in the struggle for pure air, partly because they're sources of unpleasant smells and partly because they both generate lots of mold-inducing moisture.
- The cure for both is an efficient exhaust fan, and your fan can only work well when it's clean.
- Make a practice of cleaning both fans every month or two (your kitchen fan especially) and if necessary, pick a regular date and mark it on your calendar.
- If your fan can't keep up even when clean, start budgeting for an upgrade.
8-Keep Your Pets Well Groomed
- As much as we love our fur babies, it has to be said that they don't do our indoor air any favors.
- Shedding and dander are issues with either cats or dogs, and with cats, you also have the dust (and smells) from the litter box with which to contend.
- Maintenance is your friend when pets are concerned.
- Keep them well groomed, well brushed and well bathed to keep shedding and dander to a minimum.
- For cats, who don't take to bathing as a rule, you can use a brush-through dry shampoo.
- Investing in a covered litter box and dust-free kitty litter can help as well.
9-Clean Those Carpets. A Lot.
- Carpets are comfy on the feet, especially on cold mornings when tile or wood make you long for a pair of fluffy slippers.
- Unfortunately, they're also a magnet and trap for all kinds of odors, spores and particulates, like dust, soot and dander.
- Basically, carpet is one giant dirty sock that can't get tossed in the washing machine.
- For the best indoor air, you'll need to clean them pretty frequently.
- Rent a machine or have them cleaned professionally when your budget permits and in between, keep them clean with store-bought or DIY cleaning products.
10-Be a Smart Shopper
- The most fundamental pure air hack of all is to not bring pollutants into your home when it can be avoided.
- For example, paints, solvents, varnishes and many other household products contain volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which the United States Environmental Protection Agency considers indoor pollutants.
- Most of these products are now available in low-VOC or no-VOC formulas, so look for those whenever you're shopping.
- Other purchases, such as carpets, upholstered furniture and even freshly dry-cleaned clothes, can also emit VOCs when they first arrive at your home, so consider leaving them in the garage or another well-ventilated space for a few days before you bring them inside.











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