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Home Energy Magazine Online January/February 1998
Black Stains in Houses: Soot, Dust, or Ghosts?
by Frank Vigil
Builders are never more surprised than when
they walk into one of their newly built model homes and find black stains
at wall-to-floor joints and on previously pristine carpeting underneath
doorways. What causes these stains and how can builders and homeowners
prevent them?
 |
| Aromatic candles in this designer bathroom might look elegant, but
because they contain a high concentration of oils, they are causing soot
deposition throughout the home. |
 |
| Figure 1. Ghosting stains have been seen
on interior and exterior wall surfaces; on carpet surfaces at wall-to-floor
connections or door undercuts; on ceilings; on furniture, around wall and
floor coverings, and numerous other places (1). For a stain to appear,
two factors must be present. There must be a source of particulate matter,
like the carbon soot from candles or gas log fireplaces (2) and there must
be a driving force, like gravity, electric attraction, or a forced air
unit (3) to push the particulate against a surface. |
 |
| Gas log fireplaces like this one are a common source of soot in
homes with ghosting problems. |
Dirt and Dust Also Cause Ghosting Stains
Although this article focuses primarily on soot
staining, it's important to point out that other pollutants can cause streaks
or marks to appear. To the untrained eye, these could be mistaken for soot
staining, when in reality, they are caused by impaction from dirt and dust.
Such marks are quite common under interior door undercuts, where the door
is often kept closed. Positive pressure in the closed room, caused by supply
registers blowing air into the room, forces the air to pass through the
largest available hole. In this case, it's typically the door undercut.
As the air passes between the door undercut and the carpeting, the carpet
serves as a filter, "cleaning" the air of particulate such as dirt and
dust. Over a period of time, the carpet begins to darken as more of the
dirt builds up.
Negative and positive pressures in a building
can also create stains. Air, entering the building through holes and cracks,
will leave dirt and dust on walls where there is exfiltration and on the
insulation that covers those leaks. In a building exposed to pressures
from high stack effect (warm air rising) or mechanical pressures (such
as those from duct leakage or exhaust fans), staining can sometimes occur
at the carpet edge where the interior or exterior wall joins the carpet.
Again, air is looking for a hole to exit. When a wall is open to an attic,
the air will find that hole and the carpet will filter the air as it passes
through.
It is also common for random stains to appear
on exterior wall surfaces. These stains will take on geometric shapes,
matching the framing behind the Sheetrock. This type of staining is often
the result of thermal bypasses due to poor insulation practices. Air moves
in and around the insulation, often along framing members, and cools the
surface of the Sheetrock. On the inside of the house, this cooler surface
then offers a more attractive environment for airborne dirt and dust. |
|
 |
| The pilot light from the gas log is "impinging" or touching the
log itself, causing soot to form on the cooler surface of the log. The
soot is then dispersed through the house with help from the air handler
and stack effect. |
 |
| The skirt of the sofa acts as a collection device for the soot in
the air caused by the gas log. Note the ring of soot deposited around the
bottom of the skirt. |
|
| When a room is pressurized, air leaves through the holes in the
structure--in this case, along the baseboard at the wall-to-floor joint.
As soot particulates in the air exfiltrate through that joint, the carpeting
acts as a filter. |
 |
| An example of impaction. Supply air registers located inside this
bedroom pressurize the room. The air in the positively pressurized bedroom
seeks the path of least resistance toward the lower pressure of the main
body of the house, where the cold-air return is located. Air passes underneath
the closed door, causing the carpet to act as a filter for particles. Over
a period of time, the carpeting will pick up enough airborne particles
to cause the discoloration. |
 |
| An aromatic candle in a jar is the only candle in this northern
Virginia home. Note the black soot coating the top half of the jar. Even
though the homeowner claims that she runs the kitchen exhaust fan when
the candle is lit, the candle has managed to cause soot stains around pictures
on the wall and along wall-to-ceiling joints throughout the entire one-story
house. In some cases, running air turbulence across a lit candle can cause
it to soot even more. |
By now, we've all heard about
"black soot" or "ghosting"--one of the hottest topics in the building industry
today. The dark marks have been seen on interior and exterior wall surfaces;
on carpet surfaces at wall-to-floor connections or door undercuts; on ceilings;
on furniture, heating and air conditioning filters, blinds, drapes, doors,
countertops, television screens and computer monitors; and on the top side
and leading edges of ceiling fans.
The most recent and increasingly common form
of staining is caused not by dirt or dust but by soot (see "Dirt
and Dust Also Cause Ghosting Stains"). Ghosting from soot is seen primarily
in more recent construction, but diagnosticians have detected soot stains
in older residences as well. Typically, newer homes--often still under
warranty--are the focus of attention. There have even been reports of the
problem in newly built, still unoccupied, model homes. Unfortunately, there
are as many opinions about the causes of ghosting as there are occurrences
of the mystery.
The black soot will outline items, such as ornaments
and pictures hanging on walls. Some of the substances seem to have a particular
affinity for plastics, such as coffeemakers, blenders, or garbage cans.
Deposits have also frequently been observed along the traceline between
carpeted flooring and the edge of draperies, vertical blinds and bed ruffles--even
on the inside of refrigerators! The marks may be random smears or they
may form clear geometric patterns, following the lines of the framing behind
the surface. The marks range in size from small and isolated spots to soot
running along the entire height of a wall.
Although there have been isolated occurrences
during the past decade, reports of this problem have increased significantly
during the past few years. However, no conclusive causes or solutions have
been determined.
Observers typically claim that the deposits are
a result of (depending upon geographic location) fireplace problems or
mold caused by condensation on cold surfaces. Few builders understand house-as-a-system
interactions, and most seek a single source to blame for the problem. In
fact, there are always two culprits at fault. Any time deposition of soot,
dust, or carbon appears, first there must be a source of the material,
and second, there must be a driving force to cause the material to deposit
itself on a surface.
Sources of the Soot
Investigations in buildings across the nation reveal
multiple sources of the stains. Lab analyses indicate ingredients ranging
from carbon soot (that might come from fireplaces, water heaters, furnaces,
standing pilot lights, candles, cigarette smoke, cooking byproducts, and
even automobile exhaust) to other ingredients such as paraffin, benzene,
toluene, silicates, iron oxide, cellulose and cotton, dirt or clay, pollen
and carbonates (typically found in airborne dust), common grease, and nicotine.
One lab even reported that these black deposits "could be the result of
carbon from automobile tires which becomes airborne as tires become road-worn"
(although the authors were unable to substantiate this information). Occasionally,
tests do indicate mold spores and/or mildew, but these are easily identified
and should not be confused with the increasingly more common forms of black
stains that are cropping up.
Carbon molecules act in ways that can make precise
identification difficult. Although the black color often leads to the assumption
that the sole ingredient of the material is from a combustion-related source,
we have learned that this is not always the case.
Hydrocarbon compounds will seek equilibrium with
the surrounding environment (Frick's law). That is, they will absorb whatever
is in the surrounding air. As the concentration of pollutants increases
or decreases, the concentration in the carbon molecules will change. The
length of time required for this to occur depends on many different factors,
ranging from ambient temperature and molecular weight of the particles
to the polarity of the compounds involved. Although laboratory analysis
can tell us if the sample contains carbon soot commonly found from incomplete
combustion, it cannot positively identify the actual source of the material.
Driving Forces
Once the sources are identified, a diagnostician
must determine what driving forces are responsible for depositing the material.
This often requires some real detective work.
There are three known forces at work that can
be responsible for the deposits. They are impaction (forced air), gravity,
and attraction (electrostatic forces and moisture). The location of the
deposits gives a good indication of which of the three forces may be responsible.
Impaction
Dark stains on carpet underneath a bedroom door,
for example, are an indication that the door is probably often closed.
Supply air coming from registers located inside the bedroom pressurizes
the room. Air in high-pressure areas like the newly pressurized bedroom
automatically seeks low-pressure areas. So the air in the positively pressurized
bedroom will seek the path of least resistance toward the lowest pressure.
This "lowest pressure area" would be the main body of the house where the
cold air return is located. Air passes underneath the closed door, causing
the carpet to act as a filter for the air. Over time, the carpeting will
pick up enough airborne particles to cause the discoloration. This phenomenon--probably
one of the more common ones observed--is an example of impaction or forced
air.
Gravity
Gravity is usually far easier to establish than
the other two types of driving forces. Thanks to a study by John Spengler
of the Harvard School of Public Health, we know how long particles of different
sizes can remain airborne. According to Spengler, human hair, skin flakes,
observable dust in air, and common pollens, all ranging in diameter from
less than 10 microns (dust) to 150 microns (human hair), require approximately
five seconds to settle 1 m (3.2 ft). Mite allergens, common spores, and
bacteria, ranging in size from 1 micron (bacteria) to 20 microns (common
spores) require five minutes to settle 1 m. Particles such as cat dander,
tobacco smoke, metal and organic fumes, and cell debris, all ranging in
size from 0.01 microns (cell debris) to 0.9 microns (cat dander), require
a full ten hours to settle 1 m. On the far side, viruses, smaller than
0.01 micron, will remain airborne for as long as 10 days before settling
1 m. Soot, which is carbon black particulate, ranges in size from 0.03
to 3 microns, and can remain airborne for prolonged periods of time before
settling.
Thanks to gravity, all debris eventually settles
(assuming there's no wind, stack air, or forced air to keep it airborne).
Settled particles tend to cover most flat surfaces in a house in a rather
uniform manner. However, other driving forces, such as impaction (forced
air) might be at work as well, bringing the particles into the building
where gravity then begins its work. For example, a duct system, with a
leaky return located in the garage, will act like a household vacuum, sucking
up auto exhaust fumes and other airborne contaminants floating about. The
house, unfortunately, becomes the vacuum bag, and is the repository for
everything sucked in by the return. And guess who lives inside the vacuum
bag, serving as the final filtering system? You.
Even if return ducts are tight or are not located
in the garage, leaky supply ducts located anywhere outside the heated space
can make the house have a negative pressure with respect to the outside.
This negative pressure then causes outside air, along with whatever is
in that air to enter the house through cracks, crevices, and holes. Once
inside, the particulate in the air will either randomly settle on various
flat surfaces (gravity) or follow the airstream until it strikes a solid
surface (impaction). Leaky interior walls, open to the attic, may show
discoloration at the wall-to-floor connection where carpeting has been
filtering the air as it passes up into the wall.
Attraction
Recent research by J. David Krause of Pure Air
Control Services and Kaiss K. Al-Ahmady at the Florida Department of Health,
Bureau of Environmental Toxicology, has focused on how particles, when
properly charged, will coat a surface that has an opposite charge.
Air coming out of the air handler (central heating/air
conditioning system) at a high enough velocity, and then passing through
a lined duct system, such as duct board, can become electrically charged.
The ACCA's Manual D for residential duct systems, suggests a velocity
of between 600 and 900 feet per minute (FPM) for trunk ducts (as opposed
to duct branches), depending on the type of duct system (rigid or flex)
and whether it is the supply side or the return side. Measured velocity
in many of the houses with soot deposition problems has been as high as
4,000 FPM, with typical numbers in the 1,500-2,000 FPM range. Also, the
relative humidity in these houses has been lower than 55%, and there is
a source of carbon soot (if nothing else, at least a candle burning).
This charge is then passed on to any particles
moving through the airstream. In a duct system that has both high velocity
and some portion of the system lined with fiberglass, two kinds of charging
can occur. First, particles that are simply passed along the fiberglass
surface at high speed may receive a unipolar charge. Once charged, the
particles will be naturally attracted to any surface in the home that has
the opposite charge. The second charging condition is called bipolar; it
occurs when the particulate is caught in some air turbulence within the
duct system. Due to the complex electrical process that this situation
causes, the particles have both a positive and a negative charge. Thus,
the particles are now attracted to each other, and collect to form larger,
more visible particles. This substance will then either attach itself to
a charged surface in the house, settle onto a flat surface, or deposit
as a result of impaction--on fan blades, for example, or on the filter
media for the air handler.
Not-So-Mysterious Ghostly Marks
Researchers have observed that staining happens
more frequently during the winter months, but it also occurs during summer
months when interior relative humidity is below 50%. The source for the
soot varies. Soot staining has been found in houses where owners didn't
burn candles and the only source of combustion was a standing pilot light
in a gas log fireplace. Other examples include homes where gas log fireplace
logs were adjusted (more were added), causing increased interference with
the flames and resulting in significantly large quantities of carbon soot
production. The house was literally coated with soot stains.
One homeowner in Texas has been frequently burning
up to 10 candles at a time for more than 12 years in the same house with
no problems--until now. Last year, she went to a well-known clothing store
that also carries various decorator items. The store was promoting a very
soft, aromatic wax candle. The homeowner replaced all of her existing candles
with these new ones, and that's when the problems started. Stains began
to appear after several months. Soon, stains appeared on walls, windows,
fabrics (drapes, upholstery, clothing, etc.), and electronic equipment.
Within a few more months, the stains were obvious on most everything else
in the house, including plastic items, electrical outlets, light and fan
fixtures and even in the refrigerator. This is a classic case of soot plating
caused by candles. Laboratory tests of the candles indicated that they
produced exceptionally high levels of soot (some candles burn dirtier than
others). (Because of ongoing litigation, further information about this
situation is being kept under wraps.)
Another homeowner was fanatical about cleaning
her house. When she began to find dust stains, she thought she must have
been doing a poor job of vacuuming. When she finally called us at Advanced
Energy for an analysis, we discovered that her vacuum cleaner was the actual
source of the problem! Vacuums often leak more dust back to the house than
they remove.
In another case, Advanced Energy was called to
investigate a problem house where all of the carpeting had been replaced
twice, as a result of "mysterious black lines that appear every 4 ft on
our upstairs carpeting." Diagnostics, including pressure mapping of the
house, revealed the source of the problem. The two-story house was served
by a single air handler, located in the garage. Anyone familiar with construction
knows that underneath the carpet, the subfloor usually consists of 4-ft
x 8-ft sheets of plywood. The ductwork for the upstairs was located in
the floor volume, between the first and second floors. One other clue for
this problem was the Volvo with a diesel engine parked in the garage. The
return duct connection to the air handler was very leaky, as were all of
the supply ducts. When the homeowner warmed the car up each morning, the
return duct sucked the exhaust from the car, and the soot then leaked into
the floor volume from the supply leaks. The pressurized floor volume then
pushed the air--and all that was in it--up through the seams in the plywood
sheets making up the subfloor. The carpet served as the filter for this
air.
Cleaning Up the Mess
Unfortunately, we don't have all the answers yet.
We still have much to learn about the interactions among the various forces
and pollutants involved in ghosting. What combinations of relative humidity,
air velocity, and source pollutants are necessary to create a problem?
How long must these factors be present before a problem is apparent? What
factors might exist that we don't yet know about?
We do know enough, at least, to be able to begin
taking positive action (see "The Ghosting Investigator's
Checklist"). We know that houses work as systems. We know how to deal
with driving forces by ensuring that the pressure and thermal boundaries
of our houses are aligned. We know that houses should be tight and well
sealed at the top, including wall-to-attic connections. We know that the
air handler and ductwork function as an integrated system within the house
system, and that they should be designed to complement one another and
installed to meet recommended industry standards. We know that houses should
be pressure balanced when the air handler and exhaust fan are in use and
interior doors are closed. We know that insulation should be installed
without compression and voids to avoid cold interior surfaces. On top of
all of this, we know that houses should be performance tested to ensure
that all recommendations and specifications are met. Finally, we know that
homeowners--as well as builders and trade allies--must be educated on house-as-a-system
issues and the consequences of various actions.
The Ghosting Investigator's Checklist
 |
| A brand-new white pleated filter, right. A similar white pleated
filter, left, after only two weeks of use in a house in which the air handler
ran continuously and the owners burned a candle in a jar for two to three
hours, three times a week. |
-
The very first course of action when investigating a staining problem in
a home is to identify what the stains look like and where they are occurring.
Are the stains on any particular type of surface (for example, on plastics,
on walls only, at carpet-to-wall junctions)? This helps to determine whether
the problem is created by something going on in the house or by house construction
details. Stains on wall and ceiling surfaces that are clearly geometric
in pattern, may be caused by poor insulation. What color are the stains?
Soot is generally black. Dirt and dust stains are gray, but if they are
present long enough or in high enough concentrations, they can be near-black
in color.
-
A lab analysis of the stain is a nice--but expensive--luxury. If your clients
can afford it--great; it beats guessing what the source of the stain is.
If they can't, detective work is in order. Look for signs of occupant life-style
and possible soot sources. Candles (look at the length of the wick--the
longer the wick, the more soot it produces); pilot lights on combustion
appliances (especially fireplaces). Make sure to examine the size and color
of the pilot light. Excessively long or yellow pilots are possible sources
of soot. Ask your client lots of questions about how they live. Maybe they
burn a lot of candles, but only on holidays. You may not see any because
they're packed away. Are there smokers in the house? How often do they
use the fireplace and what type of wood do they burn (soft wood does not
burn as cleanly as hard wood)? Examine the vacuum cleaner for possible
contributions. If necessary, run it in a totally dark room, lit with a
high intensity lamp. If the vacuum is spewing dust, it will be clearly
visible.
-
Don't neglect possible outside sources. Nearby high traffic areas, industrial
settings, and construction sites are all possible sources for dirty pollutants.
-
Conduct a thorough diagnostics test of the house. This includes a blower
door test of house tightness and series leakage tests of attached garages,
as well as a duct leakage test with a duct air tightness tester. Use an
accurate digital manometer (with 0.1 Pascal readings) to pressure map the
house. This includes measuring zonal pressures of floor volumes, attic
and crawlspace/basement connections, chases, bypasses, wall cavities where
stains are occurring, and stack pressures. Carefully measure what pressures
are caused by duct leakage and interior-door closure. What are these pressures
doing to any combustion zones, such as fireplaces or wood stoves?
-
Look for insulation anomalies behind the walls where the stains appear.
These are very common along kneewalls and trayed ceilings. Infrared scans
are very useful here.
-
Measure the duct velocity, using ACCA-recommended procedures. Examine the
duct system as to material type and integrity.
-
Carefully examine (and, where possible, performance-test) all combustion
devices, including gas and wood log fireplaces (be sure to check the chimney),
wood stoves, furnaces, and water heaters. Look for signs of soot or cracked
heat exchangers. Don't forget to examine the return air filter.
-
Consider the extreme. One case involved possible contamination from a neighbor's
improperly burning fireplace. Negative pressures in the client's home were
pulling the smoke and pollutants in from next door.
-
Consider "process of elimination" testing. If multiple pollutant sources
are present, place several pieces of white acrylic plastic around the house.
Eliminate all sources but one; then examine the plastic after several days.
Continue until you have eliminated (or identified) all possibilities.
-
Proper diagnostics--and more important, proper repairs-- require proper
training. Improper repairs can actually make things worse, so if you're
not sure what you're doing, call someone who has been trained.
Remember, soot stains (especially in new construction)
are often the focus of legal charges. Be exacting in your diagnostics and
keep accurate records that will stand up in court. |
This Little Light of Mine
Candles aren't the only source of soot production.
But in the majority of cases investigated by several building scientists
and energy specialists, candles were somehow related to the appearance
of stains.
Rick Graham and Craig Carter of Air-Right Energy
Design in Catharpin, Virginia, say that they have seen an alarming rise
in soot-staining complaints over the last two years. "The complaints are
generally the same, with black markings on carpets and baseboards, and
black particulate dusting on kitchen appliances and television screens,"
Graham says. "We also find particulate on HVAC filters and supply registers
and have even found the stuff in freezers." Graham says that in the majority
of homes he's investigated, candles were the main source of sooting. "In
comparing information from all of the houses tested and performing our
own tests, we found scented candles, jar candles, and oil candles appear
to emit a higher soot output than standard wax candles," Graham says.
Ron Bailey, an engineer and owner of Bailey Engineering
Corporation (BEC) in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, has had similar experience.
Once an engineering design firm, BEC found an increasing demand for forensic
engineering--figuring out why buildings are failing. Many of these cases
involved soot problems, and Bailey soon began focusing on candle usage.
He built a small test lab in his facility to study the various candle types
and how well they burned. "My mother used to burn candles; why is it just
now that problems are showing up?" Bailey says. "In the last five years,
the candle industry has doubled. Where candle making once used to be an
art form, it is now simply mass marketing. We suspect that the use of lower-grade
waxes and materials is resulting in a higher oil content, which produces
more soot when burned."
Bailey's tests include burning different candles
in small chambers while passing air through the box and through a filter.
To compare the amount of soot production with the length of time candles
are burning in a house, Bailey uses the term "candle hours." One candle
burning for one hour is one candle hour. Five candles burning for one hour
is five candle hours.
"We have a builder client who's experienced a
number of soot-related complaints," says Bailey. "He offered us use of
one of his model homes to conduct some tests in. We burned four candles
for a total of 15 hours (60 candle hours), which produced enough soot in
the house that we were forced to stop for fear of creating too much damage
in the house. We had significant soot production on the walls, drapes,
dishwasher, refrigerator, and AC filter."
Bailey explains that there are two issues to
consider when looking at how a candle might soot. "The length, thickness,
and strength of the wick highly influence how a candle burns," Bailey says,
"and also what is in the candle wax itself." Today, there is a growing
trend in the use of aromatic candles. Fragrances added to the wax should
be made specifically for that purpose. High temperatures can cause different
chemicals to behave differently once burned. "Five percent paraffin wax
is good," says Bailey. "But with many of the candles in stores today, we
find a mixture of materials, including some fragrances that were not intended
for this use." The mixture of the various fragrances and chemicals can
result in a candle that is going to burn dirtier than expected.
Wise buyers should attempt to find out what type
of candle they are purchasing and what quality of wax the candle is made
of. Obviously, this is not an easy task. At the very least, then, buyers
should keep an eye out for any soot stains. They can place a new candle
near the TV (turned on). After a few candle hours, users can wipe the screen
with a clean, white tissue. They can repeat this test periodically. If
soot problems become apparent, users should stop using those candles immediately. |
Frank Vigil is a building science specialist
at Advanced Energy Corporation in Raleigh, North Carolina.
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