You gather your most expensive people into a room to make your most important decisions. Then, somewhere in the second hour, the room quietly gets worse at making them. Not the people. The room.
Basically, we knew that high carbon dioxide levels would have negative effects, but we used to think that much higher levels were required to have an impact, like 5,000 ppm or higher.
Then in recent years, some people started doing experimentation and found that mental capabilities were significantly worse at 1000 ppm.
Just sleeping with my bedroom door closed — in a not especially airtight house — I get well over that.
Also worth pointing out that pre-industrial outdoor carbon dioxide concentrations were about 280 ppm. We’ve brought it up to about 420 ppm now. Makes it harder to ventilate to get rid of the carbon dioxide indoors than was once the case, because there’s also more of it outdoors now.
IIRC, lime or something like that can be used as a carbon scrubber, but it’s not something that you’d want to do constantly and everywhere. Looked this up some time back.
Soda lime is a mixture of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and calcium oxide (CaO). It is used in granular form within recirculating breathing environments like general anesthesia and its breathing circuit, submarines, rebreathers, and hyperbaric chambers and underwater habitats. Its purpose is to eliminate carbon dioxide (CO2) from breathing gases, preventing carbon dioxide retention and, eventually, carbon dioxide poisoning.[1][2]
Probably, if you want to regulate CO₂ levels in HVAC systems, best to ventilate to the outside and then run the exchanged air through a counterflow heat exchanger to preserve indoor temperature as much as possible.
IIRC, lime or something like that can be used as a carbon scrubber, but it’s not something that you’d want to do constantly and everywhere. Looked this up some time back.
Oh I’ve got some limes.
Soda lime.
Oh, well I can go get some of that.
Soda lime is a mixture of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and calcium oxide (CaO).
Oh, so it’s not lime soda. It’s soda lime. Alright then… I’ve got some salt and milk.
best to ventilate to the outside and then run the exchanged air through a counterflow heat exchanger to preserve indoor temperature as much as possible.
Yeah, this really shocked me too.
Basically, we knew that high carbon dioxide levels would have negative effects, but we used to think that much higher levels were required to have an impact, like 5,000 ppm or higher.
Then in recent years, some people started doing experimentation and found that mental capabilities were significantly worse at 1000 ppm.
Just sleeping with my bedroom door closed — in a not especially airtight house — I get well over that.
Also worth pointing out that pre-industrial outdoor carbon dioxide concentrations were about 280 ppm. We’ve brought it up to about 420 ppm now. Makes it harder to ventilate to get rid of the carbon dioxide indoors than was once the case, because there’s also more of it outdoors now.
I wonder if with the research on CO2 effects, if we will start to get CO2 filters in common appliances such as indoor heating and cooling equipment.
Places like the International Space Station already have to deal with this because they can’t just open a window.
IIRC, lime or something like that can be used as a carbon scrubber, but it’s not something that you’d want to do constantly and everywhere. Looked this up some time back.
searches
Soda lime.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soda_lime
Probably, if you want to regulate CO₂ levels in HVAC systems, best to ventilate to the outside and then run the exchanged air through a counterflow heat exchanger to preserve indoor temperature as much as possible.
Oh I’ve got some limes.
Oh, well I can go get some of that.
Oh, so it’s not lime soda. It’s soda lime. Alright then… I’ve got some salt and milk.
Wait, I’m not supposed to drink it?
Actually, ppm in 1000 - 2000 makes for better sleep. But for worse thinking of course.
People who sleep in their cars, engine running and parked in a garage, sleep like babies!
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It’s carbon monoxide that’s getting produced by combustion in an anoxic environment.