Air filters for the home: reduce corona aerosols

Corona aerosols
Indoor air filters: this is how you minimize the risk of infection

An air filter is able to suck corona aerosols out of the air, says Stiftung Warentest

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Air purifiers were originally developed to reduce fine dust, pollen and mold spores in closed rooms – and thus also the health risk. Since the corona pandemic, however, the devices have been increasingly used to filter infectious aerosols from the air. With success.

Basically, it is important to know that air purifiers cannot minimize the number of coronaviruses because they are too small. To do this, however, the devices are able to filter aerosols from the air that transmit the dangerous SARS-CoV-2 virus. In closed rooms that are rarely ventilated, the fine droplets collect quickly – and thus increase the risk of infection many times over. For this reason, the purchase only makes sense if several people are in the same room. The question arises: which air filters are suitable for the home, how do the devices work and what is the level of protection? Stiftung Warentest has found it out.

This is how an air filter works for the home

Regardless of which device you choose, the functionality always remains the same: everyone Air filter has a fan that sucks in the ambient air, cleans it and then sends it back into the room. Depending on the manufacturer, there are a different number of levels you can choose between. And the number of square meters, i.e. the size of the room to be cleaned, can vary from device to device – for this reason, an air filter is not always sufficient for particularly large rooms. To find out how well the devices work in practice, Stiftung Warentest tested three air filters that were (successfully) examined in 2020. At that time, however, it was not tested whether the aerosols were also filtered out of the air. That was made up for in early 2021.

Stiftung Warentest recommends this air filter

The Philips AC2889 / 10, the Rowenta PU6080 and the Soehnle Airfresh Clean Connect 500 were tested. All three air filters were switched on for 20 minutes in a room with an area of ​​16 square meters and a volume of 40 cubic meters. The result was that the two devices from Philips and Rowenta were able to minimize up to 95 percent of aerosols – and thus take first and second place. The Soehnle model still managed 90 percent and thus landed in 3rd place:

1st place: Philips AC2889 / 10

Of the AC2889 / 10 air purifier from Philips is suitable – according to the manufacturer – for a room size of up to 79 square meters. It can be controlled via an app (iOS and Android), and it also provides comprehensive information about the air quality in closed rooms.

2nd place: Rowenta Intense Pure Air Connect PU6080

The Intense Pure Air Connect PU6080 air purifier from Rowenta has a four-stage filter system (pre-filter, activated carbon, Allergy +, Nanocaptur) and, according to the manufacturer, should be able to filter the aerosols from a room of up to 140 square meters in size.

3rd place: Soehnle Airfresh Clean Connect 500

Of the Airfresh Wash 500 Air washers from Soehnle, on the other hand, can only clean small rooms: According to the manufacturer, the power is sufficient for just 35 square meters. Thanks to automatic monitoring of the room air, the device should also ensure optimal air humidification.

Another note:
In fact, these values ​​cannot be maintained by the devices over the long term: As soon as their filters wear out, the performance also drops: at Philips to 90 percent, at Rowenta to 80 percent and at Soehnle even to 46 percent.

How safe are air filters in the home?

Even though Stiftung Warentest was able to find out that air purifiers filter aerosols out of the air and minimize the risk of infection – unfortunately you do not have one hundred percent protection in closed rooms (together with other people). For example, if you were to sit at a table with a person who was carrying the coronavirus, they would exhale permanently infected aerosols. However, since the air filter cannot reduce the load to 100 percent, you would continue to be exposed to the risk of infection. Even if the risk were minimal thanks to the constant air purification.

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