How to Get Rid of Dust in the Air? – A Moist Ideal
Living in dusty conditions can have a number of adverse health effects including dry skin and breathing problems.
Common household dusting will never go away. But living with the amount of dust in the air can be minimized.
Sometimes that may mean filtering out the dust before it has a chance to land.
And sometimes that may mean adding weight to the dust so that it lands quickly and doesn’t remain in the ambient or direct air that you are breathing.
Sometimes it means using an air compressor or leaf blower and blowing it to the wind.
In most cases it’s probably a little of All the above.
How to get rid of dust in the air?
Humidity
Humidity is a big factor when it comes to dust in your home.
That’s right.
Humidity is not the first thing you think of when you are trying to figure out a way to keep the dust in the air down.
But dry air facilitates dust including all the germs and bacteria that the dust floating through the air is carrying.
So much so, that the National Library of Medicine at PubMed has stated that:
“the majority of adverse health effects caused by relative humidity would be minimized by maintaining indoor levels between 40 and 60%”.
How does that correlate to the amount of dust in the air and minimizing it?
Because when the air is dryer, dust floats easily because it has nothing to weigh it down.
When the relative humidity is kept between 40 and 60%, there is enough moisture to adhere to the floating dust particles,
including viruses attached in the dust,
to weigh down the dust particles so that it becomes too heavy to float and fall out of the ambient air (the air that you breathe).
Dry Skin
Dry air not only creates an easy path for germs and allergens to travel, it also creates an atmosphere for dry skin.The lack of moisture in the air actually creates a vacuum that pulls moisture from anywhere it can get it.
And one of those places just happens to be your skin.