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Is smoke in your home? Here’s how to make an air purifier using a box fan : ReadNOW



Smoke from massive wildfires in Canada and Minnesota engulf the Washington, D.C. skyline on Friday morning, reducing visibility and casting a haze over the Washington Monument and Lincoln Memorial.

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Finn Gomez/Getty Images

A version of this story was originally published on Jan. 10, 2025. It has been updated to reflect the wildfires currently bringing smoke to the U.S.

Interest in air filters and purifiers is spiking as wildfire smoke spreads, including questions about how to build a homemade air purifier.

On Friday, the air in a large section of the U.S. — from Minnesota to Virginia — was listed as “very unhealthy” due to particulate matter from large wildfires, according to the federal AirNow air quality monitor.

The smoke is coming from wildfires in Ontario, Canada, and northern Minnesota — where Duluth and other cities are enduring hazardous air at record levels, as Minnesota Public Radio reports.

On AirNow’s map, a purple zone signals “very unhealthy” air quality index values from 201 to 300. That level triggers public health alerts, because “everyone may experience more serious health effects,” the Environmental Protection Agency says. Of particular concern are children, older adults, and people with heart of lung disease.

Within the warning area, many communities are currently in an even more dire “hazardous” category, reflecting an AQI of at least 301 — a level the EPA considers “extremely rare.”

A big worry, experts say, is fine inhalable particulate matter known as PM 2.5 (for 2.5 microns) that can lodge deep into our lungs.

And as researchers at the University of Washington note, “Smaller ultrafine particles (PM 0.1) can pass into the bloodstream and organs, including the brain.”

Here’s a quick guide to getting cleaner air:

Search filters by their MERV rating

Filters are key, whether you’re using them to upgrade your home’s HVAC system or put them in an air purifier or a DIY air cleaner. A filter’s ability to pull particulates and other matter out of the air are rated by Minimum Efficiency Reporting Values, or MERV. Filters with higher values can catch smaller contaminants like smoke, bacteria and viruses.

A MERV rating of 13 means the filter is efficient at catching items from 0.3 to 1 micron in size: “Bacteria, droplet nuclei (sneeze), most tobacco smoke, insecticide dust,” according to the California Air Resources Board, or CARB.

“Upgrading to a filter rated MERV 13 or higher can be especially important during smoky periods to effectively remove fine particle pollution from smoke in the indoor air,” the EPA says. It adds that most HVAC systems work fine using MERV 13 filters, as long as the filter is replaced frequently — but if you’re in doubt, ask an HVAC technician to be sure.



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