How a High-Efficiency Air Filter Could Save Your Life

Studies Have Shown that High-Efficiency Air Filters Can Improve Air Quality, and Help Prevent Lung Cancer and Heart Disease; But How Exactly Are These Filters Rated for Efficiency?

RIVERDALE, NJ / ACCESSWIRE / August 20, 2017 / When you hear the term "high-efficiency air filter" what do you think? Like most people, you probably think of hard-working filters that can improve the air you breathe, and that's true. But do you understand how a filter achieves high-efficiency? Or what that phrase even means?

This is important because without understanding the basic standards of air filter efficiency, you won't understand how to shop for the best filters, or what the terminology companies often use really means. With that in mind, let's look at how high-efficiency filters are measured, and why they are so important in the fight to improve indoor air quality.

Explaining the MERV Standard

Explaining the Minimum Efficiency Reporting Value ("MERV") standard is a good place to start because this is the standard established by the American Society of Heating Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers ("ASHRAE"), which oversees the air filtration industry.

According to the National Air Filtration Association ("NAFA"), MERV is based on a scale from 1 to 16 and measures an air filter's capacity to trap particles from the air based on three different size ranges.

Within each of these three size ranges, there are four sub-ranges, so air filters are really measured against a total of 12 different size ranges. The 16-point scale works in ascending order, so the higher the MERV rating, and the greater the efficiency of the air filter.(1)

The problem with the MERV standard is that the measurements don't follow strict logic. For example, you would assume that an air filter rated a MERV 8 would capture 50 percent of all airborne particles, but a MERV-8 filter is only rated to trap about five percent of harmful particles.

That's because the 16-point scale doesn't work in exact accordance with logical percentages, so it's difficult for consumers to know just how efficient their air filters are based on the MERV point system.

The New ISO 16890 Standard Changes the Game

This confusion regarding MERV is not the only reason air filter efficiency ratings are difficult to understand. Another reason is that the U.S. is on a different standard than countries in Europe, which means consumers cannot make valid comparisons about air filter efficiency.

That's why the new ISO 16890 Standard changes the game for consumers and manufacturers of air filters.