upper waypoint

Does Your Range Hood Suck? Cooking Spikes Indoor Air Pollution

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

(Photo: Shannon Rosa)
(Photo: Shannon Rosa)

The summer season often brings outdoor air pollution alerts, but it turns out the air inside your kitchen can sometimes be just as harmful. Several of the same pollutants found in smog come from cooking dinner.

Range hoods are designed to capture these cooking fumes, but even some expensive models aren’t very effective. So researchers at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab are trying to fix that.

“I think we think of our home as safe,” said Jennifer Logue, research scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab.

Cooking Tips

– Always turn your fan on
– Cook on the back burners
– Use highest fan setting
– Clean grease traps periodically
– If you don’t have a hood, open windows

Sponsored

“You spend 70 percent of your time in your home,” she said. “And what you do in your home has a huge impact on what you’re exposed to, which in turn has a huge impact on your health.”

In a study of Southern California homes where people cook at least once a week, more than half had air pollution levels worse than the outdoor health limit for nitrogen dioxide, a pollutant that can cause respiratory irritation.

“If you exceeded the standards outdoors, it would be a really big deal,” Logue said. “But if you exceed them in your house, nobody’s paying attention.”

Homes with electric stoves aren’t in the clear either, because cooking the food itself creates air pollution. Fats produce a lung irritant called acrolein. Cooking also puts off fine particle pollution, which is tied to long-term health problems, like respiratory and heart issues.

It sounds a little scary, but Logue says there’s a solution: a good range hood that vents to the outside. The only problem is that finding a good range hood isn’t simple.

Tips for Buying a New Hood

– Look for one that covers the entire cook top
– It should move 200 cubic feet of air per minute, certified by the Home Ventilating Institute
– Choose a noise rating of 3 sone or less
– Choose a hood shape with a hollow space underneath for collecting fumes

“Not all hoods work the same and currently, unfortunately, there’s no way for people to really know how effective their range hood is,” Logue said.

Testing Range Hoods

Inside Berkeley Lab’s test kitchen, Woody Delp and his team make a recipe they’ve made a hundred times exactly the same way: stir-fried green beans.

“We measure out the beans the same amount each time,” Delp said. “We want to make sure that everything tries to stay as constant as we can.”

The lab’s gas stove has a hood that’s rigged with air monitors. As the green beans sizzle away, particle counters around the room start to spike.

“This hood at this particular flow setting is probably capturing about half of what’s coming off,” Delp said. “Not quite.”

Woody Delp measures green beans in the test kitchen. (Photo: Lawrence Berkeley National Lab)
Woody Delp measures green beans in the test kitchen. (Photo: Lawrence Berkeley National Lab)

Based on their testing, the hood is in the middle of the pack. Delp found hoods that were only 15 percent effective at capturing cooking emissions. Others did much better, but they weren’t necessarily the most expensive ones. And specific information about how well the hoods capture cooking emissions is not available to consumers.

“If you go down to your local big box retailer, they’ll have what the air flow rate is and maybe a sound rating on it,” Delp said.

Air flow – or how powerful the fan is – is only part of the puzzle. The shape of the hood and how far it extends over a stovetop makes a big difference.

The length of the ductwork also affects how the hood functions. “Oftentimes it has too many bends and too many elbows and a long run to get it outside,” Delp said, “and for some of the range hoods, that kills the air flow.”

Delp and his team are developing a standardized test to measure hood effectiveness, which is currently being reviewed by an international testing board. Delp says a lot of manufacturers are interested in using it.

Regulating Indoor Air

“Unfortunately there’s not really a state or federal agency that has comprehensive authority over indoor air pollution,” said Peggy Jenkins, who manages the indoor air quality program at the California Air Resources Board.

California has strict ventilation rules for other gas appliances in homes, including furnaces and hot water heaters. Stoves and range hoods have been largely overlooked.

“In a sense it’s low-hanging fruit but it’s not really simple,” Jenkins said. Regulatory efforts would require a number of state agencies to get involved. But Jenkins says there’s growing interest in changing the state’s building codes for range hoods. That could mean adding new requirements for the air flow or the hood’s shape, since those vary quite a bit.

“We all love to have our microwaves over the range,” Jenkins said, “but the ventilation that’s associated with those is not as strong – not as efficient or effective.”

Meanwhile, for home cooks, Jennifer Logue has a few tips as she finishes up her risotto. “I always, always, always use the range hood even though mine sounds like a jet engine, she said. “But I always use it because it think it’s really important.”

Use the highest fan setting and put pots and pans on the back burners, where hoods capture the most pollutants. They’re simple changes but effective ones, Logue says. The hard part is remembering them.

 

lower waypoint
next waypoint
California’s Commercial Salmon Season Is Closed Again This YearAs California Seeks to Legalize Psychedelics for Therapy, Oregon Provides Key LessonsIs It Time for an Essential California Energy Code to Get a Climate Edit?Hoping for a 2024 'Super Bloom'? Where to See Wildflowers in the Bay AreaWatch Ferns Get FreakyA Bay Area Lawmaker Pushes to Expand Access to MethadoneEver Wake Up Frozen in the Middle of the Night, With a Shadowy Figure in the Room?Where to See Cherry Blossoms in the Bay Area This SpringEverything You Never Wanted to Know About Snail SexSchizophrenia: What It's Like to Hear Voices