Alpine Air Purity: The PCO vs. HEPA Technical Debate
Mountain homes in Summit County are built to be airtight to survive sub-zero winters. While this is great for your heating bill, it creates an environment where indoor pollutants are trapped. To combat this, we look at two primary technologies: **HEPA (High-Efficiency Particulate Air)** and **PCO (Photocatalytic Oxidation)**.
HEPA: The Physical Barrier
HEPA filters are mechanical barriers. They are designed to trap 99.97% of particles as small as 0.3 microns. In the mountains, this is excellent for capturing pine pollen, dust, and pet dander. However, HEPA does not "kill" anything; it simply catches it. At our altitude, the restrictive nature of HEPA can also increase the static pressure of your blower motor, potentially leading to premature wear if not engineered correctly.
PCO: Molecular Destruction
PCO technology uses UV-C light and a titanium dioxide catalyst to create hydroxyl radicals. These radicals don't just "trap" pollutants; they attack them at the molecular level, breaking down VOCs, odors, and biological pathogens into harmless water vapor and CO2. For mountain residents, PCO is the ultimate solution for "sealing" indoor air against biological contaminants during long winter lock-ins.
At Hvac Pros Coalville, we often recommend a **Hybrid IAQ approach**: utilizing high-capacity MERV-13 media for particulate capture and inline PCO for molecular sterilization.
