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Did you Know? Cleaning chemicals can have an enormous impact on Indoor Air Quality. In many indoor air quality investigations, cleaning chemicals are routinely found as a normal part of indoor air make-up. Any chemical with an odor produces VOC's (volatile organic compounds). Carpet cleaning chemicals typically emit lower chemical emission levels than other required flooring cleaning chemicals, and since carpet cleaning is performed less often, routine carpet care has a lower impact on indoor air quality.
Cleaning Chemicals and IAQ
Careful planning, informed chemical selection, and effective equipment selection can limit the effects of carpet care on indoor air quality. For air quality considerations, vacuum cleaners should be selected based on filtration efficiency rather than cost. Cleaning chemical selection for hard surface floorcoverings should be based on environmental impact and continuing health implications rather than cost or ease of use. Many floor finishes continue to contribute significant chemical emissions for weeks or days after recoating. Carpet cleaning introduces far fewer chemicals into the indoor environment and most present no toxicity concerns. However, if you feel you are overly sensitive to any chemical, it is recommended that you schedule to be out of the home during carpet cleaning. Most chemical emissions should be gone within 2-3 hours following cleaning and all emissions should be non detectable once the carpet has dried.
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