Indoor Air Quality Draper UT | Draper Heating & Air

Indoor Air Quality Services — Draper Heating & Air Conditioning

Indoor air quality in the south Salt Lake Valley is not a marketing category. It is a measurable, documented public health concern driven by three converging factors specific to our geography and climate that do not apply to most of the country:

PCAPS Inversions. The Salt Lake Valley’s persistent cold-air pool (PCAPS) events trap PM2.5 and other pollutants below approximately 5,000 feet from November through February. The Utah Division of Air Quality records 24-hour PM2.5 readings above the EPA NAAQS threshold of 35 µg/m³ on red-burn days, and during severe inversion events, readings regularly exceed 65–100 µg/m³. Draper sits in the southern bowl of that inversion. The return air system in your home is actively processing that air every hour the HVAC system runs.

Hard Water and Humidity. Municipal water delivered to Draper, Sandy, Riverton, and Bluffdale from Wasatch snowmelt runs 15–25 grains per gallon in hardness. The south valley’s Climate Zone 5B winters are dry — relative humidity regularly drops below 20% indoors during sustained cold periods when the furnace runs continuously. Wood floors split at seams, nasal passages dry out, static electricity becomes a daily nuisance, and biological viruses survive longer in low-humidity air. Humidification in this market is not a comfort option; it is a building materials and occupant health decision.

Wildfire Smoke. Post-2017, the Wasatch Front has experienced increasingly severe wildfire smoke events from fires throughout the Intermountain West. On the worst days — typically mid-July through September — 24-hour PM2.5 readings exceed 150 µg/m³. A standard MERV 8 filter allows the majority of fine wildfire smoke particles to pass through. MERV 13 filtration removes approximately 85–90% of PM2.5 at 0.3–1.0 micron particle size. HEPA filtration removes 99.97% of particles at 0.3 microns.

Our IAQ services address each of these documented local conditions with equipment and installation approaches specific to the south Salt Lake Valley — not generic national IAQ marketing applied to a market with distinct air quality challenges.

IAQ Services We Provide

Duct Cleaning

NADCA-standard mechanical duct cleaning for return and supply systems using a negative-air machine and contact-vacuum brush system. The documented indication for duct cleaning: visible debris accumulation in the duct system confirmed by before-and-after inspection photos. We do not sell duct cleaning as a routine annual service; we recommend it when inspection findings show actual contamination that affects system performance or occupant health. Common legitimate indications in the south Salt Lake Valley include post-renovation debris, rodent or pest intrusion documented by droppings or nesting material, and visible mold or biological growth in moisture-damaged duct sections.

Humidifiers

Whole-home bypass and steam humidifier installation. The Aprilaire 8126 steam humidifier is our standard recommendation for south Salt Lake Valley homes because steam canister technology handles the 15–25 grains per gallon water hardness without the pad replacement cycle that destroys bypass-style evaporator pads every 8–14 months instead of the manufacturer-rated 24. Steam humidifiers produce humidity-controlled moisture regardless of furnace operation cycle, providing consistent indoor relative humidity setpoint maintenance that bypass units cannot achieve without continuous furnace operation.

Dehumidifiers

Whole-home dehumidifier installation for finished basements, crawlspaces, and tight-envelope new construction in Daybreak, Rosecrest, and newer Herriman builds where HRV/ERV ventilation systems bring outdoor moisture into sealed homes during summer monsoon events. Aprilaire 8820 and Santa Fe Advance series. Sized to the space’s moisture load and configured to maintain a target relative humidity setpoint rather than running continuously.

Air Purifiers

Whole-home air purification including HEPA bypass cabinet installation, Aprilaire media air cleaners (Model 1210, 1610, 2410), and Reme Halo in-duct ionization systems. For households with documented pulmonary conditions or physician recommendations for sub-MERV 13 filtration during PCAPS inversion events, HEPA bypass cabinets are installed in parallel to the main return drop with static pressure verification confirming the blower can handle the increased resistance without reducing airflow below the system’s design CFM.

UV Light Treatment

UV-C coil irradiation and in-duct air treatment for biological growth control on evaporator coils and in supply duct sections downstream of the air handler. RGF Environmental Reme Halo and Carrier Performance Air Purifier systems. UV-C coil irradiation is particularly effective in the south Salt Lake Valley’s PCAPS inversion conditions where elevated particulate loading creates substrate for biological growth on evaporator coil surfaces over time. Bulb replacement service on existing UV systems per manufacturer replacement schedules (typically 9,000–14,000 hours).

Air Filter Replacement

Whole-home media filter replacement service for Aprilaire Model 210, 410, and 413 media cabinets and similar systems. MERV 13 minimum for PCAPS inversion conditions. High-MERV filter installation with static pressure verification — the wrong filter in the wrong cabinet increases resistance beyond what the blower can handle, reducing airflow and system efficiency. Every high-MERV filter upgrade we perform includes a static pressure measurement confirming the blower operates within its rated range with the new filter in service.

Carbon Monoxide Testing

CO testing at the furnace, water heater, fireplace, and in living areas with calibrated Testo 316-2 and Bacharach MGS-150 instruments. Safety assessment and written report. Combustion analysis per ANSI Z21.47. Critical for SunCrest and Traverse Ridge homes where furnace altitude derating was skipped at installation — rich-burn combustion at 6,200 feet produces elevated CO in the flue gas and, if a heat exchanger breach is present, elevated CO in the return air stream. We test specifically for the ambient CO level in the return air grille, not just at the appliance, because return-air CO is the exposure pathway that matters for occupant safety.

Why IAQ Matters More in Draper Than the National Average

The PCAPS Inversion in Numbers

The Utah DAQ’s air quality monitoring data from the Draper monitoring station shows an average of 18–24 red-burn days per heating season (November–March) with 24-hour PM2.5 readings above 35 µg/m³. During the worst inversions, hourly PM2.5 readings at the Draper monitoring station have exceeded 65 µg/m³ for periods of 48–72 consecutive hours. For context, the EPA NAAQS 24-hour PM2.5 standard is 35 µg/m³ and the WHO 24-hour PM2.5 guideline is 15 µg/m³.

A home running a forced-air HVAC system with a MERV 8 filter during a red-burn day is processing outdoor inversion air through a filter that captures approximately 20–35% of PM2.5 at 0.3–1.0 micron. The remaining 65–80% of inversion PM2.5 passes through the filter and is distributed to every room in the home through the supply ductwork. MERV 13 raises that capture rate to approximately 85–90% at the same particle size. The difference is directly measurable in indoor PM2.5 concentration during inversion events.

The Humidity Deficit in Numbers

The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) Standard 55 defines the human comfort zone for winter occupancy as 68–75°F with 30–60% relative humidity. During sustained cold periods in the south Salt Lake Valley, a forced-air heating system running continuously can drive indoor relative humidity below 20% — well outside the ASHRAE comfort zone and into the range where biological viruses survive and transmit more efficiently, wood building materials experience measurable dimensional change, and occupant symptoms (dry eyes, nosebleeds, cracked skin) become common household complaints rather than occasional inconveniences.

At 4,500–6,200 feet elevation, the dry adiabatic lapse rate means outdoor air has even lower absolute humidity than at the valley floor during winter cold events. A home at SunCrest elevation during a January cold snap is heating outdoor air that, after warming to 70°F indoors, may produce relative humidity below 15% without humidification. Below 10% relative humidity, hardwood flooring can lose enough moisture to crack across the grain rather than simply shrink at the seams.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most important IAQ improvement I can make in a Draper home?
For most homes in our service area, the answer is a MERV 13 filter upgrade combined with whole-home humidification — in that order. The MERV 13 upgrade addresses the inversion-season PM2.5 loading that affects every home from November through March. Whole-home humidification addresses the 30%+ relative humidity deficit that damages building materials and increases occupant health risk during the same period. Both improvements together for a typical Draper home run $400–$1,800 depending on whether the existing filter cabinet supports MERV 13 without a static pressure penalty and whether a steam or bypass humidifier is appropriate for the home’s water chemistry and budget. Compared to an in-duct air purifier or UV system, the filter and humidifier combination addresses the two measurable, documented local conditions rather than the ambient biological contamination that UV and ionization systems target.
Should I run my HVAC fan continuously during PCAPS inversion events?
Yes, with the right filter. Continuous fan operation during red-burn days recirculates indoor air through the filter continuously, providing ongoing PM2.5 removal from the indoor air even when neither heating nor cooling is needed. A MERV 13 filter in a correctly sized cabinet with a blower capable of operating continuously at the filter’s pressure drop removes PM2.5 from indoor air at roughly 4–8 air changes per hour depending on the home’s volume and the system’s CFM. The caveat: a MERV 13 filter in an undersized cabinet on a blower that cannot handle the static pressure penalty will reduce airflow and may cause the blower motor to overheat during continuous operation. We measure static pressure when we install MERV 13 upgrades specifically to confirm continuous fan operation is appropriate.
How do I know if my indoor air quality is problematic?
Several measurable indicators: (1) Persistent allergy or respiratory symptoms during inversion season that improve when you leave the valley or spend time in a well-filtered building. (2) Visible dust accumulation on supply registers within days of a filter change during inversion events — this indicates a high particle loading rate that confirms outdoor air is reaching your supplies. (3) Indoor relative humidity consistently below 30% during winter — a $15 digital hygrometer on your thermostat wall will tell you within minutes. (4) CO alarm activations from gas appliances — a CO alarm that trips repeatedly requires immediate investigation of the gas appliance combustion. (5) A pulmonologist, allergist, or primary care physician who has specifically noted air quality as a contributing factor to your symptoms. We install test equipment and provide written reports where measurement-based assessment is needed before an IAQ improvement decision.
Do portable air purifiers do the same thing as whole-home systems?
Portable units are effective in a single room and provide no treatment for the rest of the home. A HEPA portable purifier rated for 500 square feet treats 500 square feet of the home’s air. If the return air system is pulling inversion air through a MERV 8 filter and distributing PM2.5 throughout the home via the supply ducts, the portable unit in the bedroom is treating a room that is constantly being re-contaminated from the supply register. A whole-home MERV 13 upgrade or HEPA bypass installation treats every cubic foot of air the HVAC system processes, which is every cubic foot in the conditioned home during continuous fan operation. For occupants with documented pulmonary conditions or physician recommendations, a whole-home HEPA bypass in combination with portable HEPA units in sleeping areas provides the most comprehensive PM2.5 reduction during severe inversion events.
What is an HRV or ERV and does my home need one?
A heat recovery ventilator (HRV) or energy recovery ventilator (ERV) provides controlled mechanical ventilation to tight-construction homes that cannot meet ASHRAE 62.2 minimum ventilation requirements through natural infiltration alone. Modern new construction in Daybreak Village, Rosecrest, and newer Herriman builds is often sealed tightly enough that natural infiltration is below the 0.35 ACH minimum ASHRAE 62.2 standard, and mechanical ventilation is required. An HRV exchanges stale indoor air for fresh outdoor air while recovering 70–80% of the heat energy in the exhaust air stream. An ERV also transfers moisture, making it preferable in both hot-humid and cold-dry climates where humidity management is a priority. In Draper’s dry winter conditions, an ERV is generally preferred over an HRV because it retains indoor moisture in the exhaust-to-supply transfer. We install and balance HRV and ERV systems in new construction and as retrofits in existing tightly-sealed homes that show CO₂ accumulation, persistent VOC odor, or chronic low humidity despite humidification.

Contact Draper Heating & Air Conditioning

Our dispatch office is two minutes from the I-15 and Bangerter interchange. For IAQ assessments, MERV 13 filter upgrades, humidifier installation, or any other indoor air quality service across Draper, Sandy, Bluffdale, Riverton, South Jordan, and Herriman, contact us directly.

Contact Us →

Office Hours

  • Emergency Service: 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
  • Office Staff: Monday – Friday, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Closed: Weekends and State/Federal Holidays (emergency line always active)