Uses for Chemical Purifiers
Chemicals have made our lives better in many ways. But volatile organic chemicals that off-gas into indoor air can make breathing uncomfortable and unhealthy.
Here are 3 situations where a chemical air purifier should be used to improve health.
Beauty and Nail Salons are notorious for the fumes that many of their products create. Walking through a mall and passing a beauty salon is all that is necessary to smell the fumes from perms, dyes and other products.
The smell is offensive even if you don’t enter the shop. Imagine he amount of fumes inhaled by one technician in a day, and it’s easy to see why this can easily become a menace to good health.
Fine Art Studios create visual beauty, but the air quality often suffers because of it. Oil based paints and solvents such as turpentine can become offensive quickly. They can lead to acute symptoms such as headaches, dizziness, and nausea. And feeling that way in the studio surely does not encourage creativity or even a desire to be there.
School Art Rooms use many of the same products that art studios use. The difference is that instead of one artist there are often as many as 20-25 students using products that off gas chemicals into the air.
Imagine 25 magic markers sending fumes into the air for a 25 minute class, and you'll probably agree that there’s no question that filtering these airborne chemicals shouldn’t be a choice.
PurerAir.com offers a chemical air purifier that is portable yet heavy-duty in its ability to keep air virtually free of chemical fumes. See it now at http://purerair.com/healthmate_plus.html
Take good care,
Debbie Davis, President
PurerAir.com
(800) 997-2989
Labels: chemical air cleaner, chemical air purifier, chemical fumes
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