Guest guest Posted November 21, 2006 Report Share Posted November 21, 2006 Josh, My studies of using a leaf blower in mold remediation, is after the remediation has been completed; and it can be used as a final clearance procedure for the removal of micro-fine surface dust and spores. When I say study, this is what I generally find: 1. The remediated area appears “visually” to be clean after HEPA vacuuming, however, the containment “failed” (a term used by some IEPs that I do not approve of) “to achieve clearance” (another term I do not approve of); 2. Negative air is running to where the supply air is coming from the clean air of the building or outside air; 3. Airborne particle counts are low, but the airborne mold sample data showed fungal anomalies (Stachybotrys spores and cell particles) that continue to be unusually high; 4. After re-inspection of the area to ensure there are no hidden water damaged areas remaining and the building materials are dry, re-HEPA vacuum the area. Then consider setting up a “separate” capture filtration system inside the containment: a. As simple as one or multiple 18 inch x 18 inch or 20 inch x 20 inch box fans with 2 inch pleated filter attached (with duct tape) exhausting outside or to an air scrubber inlet (all factors depend on the size of the containment, building materials, equipment, filtration and exhaust); b. A second set of one or multiple box fans are placed at the other side of the containment that supply a forced-airflow stream directly to the capture area. (Note: the capture area should have more exhaust air pressure than the supply air pressure being delivered to it, otherwise you get backpressure.) c. The leaf blower (electric not gas) is turned on at the “farthest side of the containment,” thus, blowing “across” ceilings, walls and floor toward the air stream leading to the capture filtration. i. Particle counts tend to jump from background (e.g., 200 to 1,000 particles) to above background (200,000 +). ii. In several instances, micro-fine dust became so much of an issue that the increase of eye and respiratory protection had to be increased. d. Surface and air scrubbing took an average of 15 to 30 minutes (per room). e. On completion, airborne particle counts reduced dramatically to more than 80% of the high particle count values. f. Box fans, air scrubbers and filters were bagged and removed from the containment. g. Surfaces such as plastic containment and the existing negative air equipment were HEPA vacuumed and damp-cloth wiped down. 5. Factoring in a particle’s settling rate, the IEP tested the containment’s air and surfaces 24-hours later. The laboratory results were favorable to where the contained areas passed the IEPs test objectives. Moffett From: iequality [mailto:iequality ] On Behalf Of Josh Sent: Tuesday, November 21, 2006 7:45 AM To: iequality Subject: RE: Clearance testing & " standards " This was a response I received from someone else and my reply was 1) where does the leaf blower come from (where has it been stored, was it used on another job, etc.) and 2) should it be considered “sterile” enough to bring inside of containment? It would seem to me if we are talking about 1,2,3….spores, I need to really consider everything that is being brought into containment. Josh From: iequality [mailto:iequality ] On Behalf Of Wei Tang Sent: Monday, November 20, 2006 8:28 PM To: iequality Subject: Re: Clearance testing & " standards " IMHO, one or two Stachy spores in the air is no big deal if the surface is all cleaned up. However, it would be a problem if the surface is not sufficiently cleaned. Ok, now, how do we test for surface? One (or a few) square inch of sample is not going to tell you much on the entire job, right? Have the consultant use a electric leave blower (a small one, please) and blow all the spores off the surface while sampling to see if he can get any significant amount of Stachy (or any other) spores in the air. Of course, you should blow the spores/hyphae off the dried surface while running the air scrubber for some time before the PRV. Please see Bob s' PRV book for details. Wei Tang QLab healthyiaq <josh2cureit> wrote: Our company performs both investigations and remediation. We only do both if it is a smaller residential project but on commercial projects we call in a third party inspection company (We are located in a rural area). I have used a different company for the first time on a commercial remediation project and they wanted to fail me for 2 (two) stachybotrys spores that showed up in an air sample post remediation. They found the area cleaned and remediated properly. Investigation showed no other signs of contamination in other areas. Our remediation supervisor runs a tight ship. Am I to think that this should not pass? Especially given that there was ONE air sample taken? I want to take a quick minute to say that for the last year or two I have been one of those " silent lurkers " . I do appreciate the different posts and I do think (most of the time) that this is a great site. Josh Wei Tang, Ph.D. Lab Director QLab 5 Drive Cherry Hill, NJ 08003 www.QLabUSA.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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