Dust Knowledge Hub

Air scrubbers are a practical way to control airborne dust when source extraction alone is not enough. They recirculate room air through high-efficiency filters or exhaust it to create negative pressure, reducing exposure and stopping dust migration to clean areas.

How air scrubbers work

  • Air passes through prefilters that catch larger debris, protecting the final filter.
  • Final filters should be high efficiency (H13/H14); choose H14 for fine or carcinogenic dusts.
  • Units can recirculate within a room or duct out to maintain negative pressure in enclosures.

Selecting and sizing

  • Calculate room volume (L × W × H). Aim for 6–12 air changes per hour, more for high-risk tasks.
  • Match required airflow to the unit’s performance under load, not free-air figures.
  • Consider noise, power availability, and space for safe duct runs and filter changes.

Setup that actually works

  • Placement: avoid short-circuiting. Pull air across the workface towards the scrubber and away from exits.
  • Ducting: use smooth, short runs. Seal joints and discharge outdoors or into a safe zone if using negative pressure.
  • Containment: seal doorways and penetrations; provide make-up air to avoid starving the unit.
  • Maintenance: monitor filter loading; swap prefilters early to keep performance steady. Bag and seal spent filters.

When you need one

  • Enclosed or poorly ventilated spaces where visible dust persists despite tool extraction.
  • Demolition, sanding, grinding, fire/flood remediation and mould-affected areas.
  • Occupied buildings where stopping migration is as important as reducing exposure.

Contractors often pair LEV with a portable air scrubber; equipment such as the MAXVAC Dustblocker range is commonly used in temporary enclosures and refurb zones.

Verify performance

  • Use a particulate meter (PM2.5/PM10) to confirm reductions and adjust placement.
  • Record readings, filter changes and ACH calculations as part of your COSHH assessment.

Practical takeaways

  • Choose H14 filtration for fine or high-hazard dusts and size for 6–12 ACH.
  • Place and duct to move air across the workface and prevent short-circuiting.
  • Track PM readings and maintain prefilters to keep airflow stable under load.

Set up well, an air scrubber is a reliable control that complements source extraction, keeps neighbours safe and leaves rooms cleaner for handover.

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