Related Resources: civil engineering
Odor Control and Odor Thresholds
Odor Control and Odor Thresholds for Human Smell
Ventilation engineering:
(1) contemporary construction methods result in buildings that allow less air infiltration through the building envelope;
(2) indoor sources of odors associated with modern building materials, furnishings, and office equipment have increased;
(3) outdoor air is often polluted; and
(4) energy costs encourage lower ventilation rates at a time when requirements for a relatively odor-free environment are greater than ever.
Outdoor odor sources that may require engineering mitigation are:
- automotive exhaust
- diesel exhaust
- hazardous waste sites
- sewage treatment plants
- compost piles
- refuse facilities
- printing plants
- refineries
- chemical plants
indoor odor sources include
- tobacco products
- bathrooms and toilets
- building materials
- (e.g., adhesives,
- paints,
- caulks,
- processed wood,
- carpets,
- plastic sheeting,
- insulation board),
- consumer products (e.g., food, toiletries, cleaning materials, polishes),
- hobby materials,
- fabrics,
- foam cushions.
- offset printing processes,
- copiers,
- computer printers
- Electrostatic processes may emit ozone.
- Humans emit a wide range of odorant's
- acetaldehyde,
- ammonia,
- ethanol,
hydrogen sulfide, - mercaptans.
- Mildew and other decay processes often produce odors in occupied
spaces (home and office), - damp basements,
- ventilation systems (e.g., from wetted air-conditioning coils and spray dehumidifiers).
The table below shows odor detection threshold concentrations for selected compounds. The threshold limit value (TLV) is the concentration of a compound that should have no adverse health consequences if a worker is regularly exposed for 8 h periods (ACGIH, revised annually). For ratios greater than 1, most occupants can detect the odor and leave the area long before the compound becomes a health risk. As the ratio increases, the safety factor provided by the odor also increases.
Compound |
Odor Threshold,a
ppmv |
TLV,b
ppmv |
Ratio
|
Acetaldehyde |
0.067
|
25-C
|
360
|
Acetone |
62
|
500
|
8.1
|
Acetonitrile |
1600
|
20
|
0.013
|
Acrolein |
1.8
|
0.1-C
|
0.06
|
Ammonia |
17
|
25
|
1.5
|
Benzene |
61
|
0.5
|
0.01
|
Benzyl chloride |
0.041
|
1
|
24
|
Carbon tetrachloride |
250
|
5
|
0.02
|
Chlorine |
0.08
|
0.5
|
6
|
Chloroform |
192
|
10
|
0.05
|
Dioxane |
12
|
20
|
1.7
|
Ethylene dichloride |
26
|
10
|
0.4
|
Hydrogen sulfide |
0.0094
|
10
|
1064
|
Methanol |
160
|
200
|
1.25
|
Methylene chloride |
160
|
50
|
0.3
|
Methyl ethyl ketone |
16
|
200
|
12.5
|
Phenol |
0.06
|
5
|
83
|
Sulfur dioxide |
2.7
|
2
|
0.74
|
Tetrachloroethane |
7.3
|
1
|
0.14
|
Tetrachloroethylene |
47
|
25
|
0.5
|
Toluene |
1.6
|
20
|
13
|
Trichloroethylene |
82
|
10
|
0.1
|
Xylene (isomers) |
20
|
100
|
5
|
Sources: ACGIH (updated annually), AIHA (1989).
aAll thresholds are detection thresholds (ED50).
bAll TLVs are 8 h time-weighted averages, except those shown with -C, which are 15 min ceiling values.
Source
ASHRAE Handbook, I-P Eidtion 2021
Related