ACH Calculator
Accurately calculate Air Changes Per Hour (ACH) for residential, commercial, and medical spaces to ensure optimal indoor air quality.
Length of the room in feet.
Width of the room in feet.
Height from floor to ceiling (default is 8 ft).
Total Cubic Feet per Minute (CFM) from air purifiers or HVAC.
Air Changes Per Hour (ACH)
0 ft³
0 min
0 CFM
Fig 1: Your Calculated ACH vs. Common Industry Standards.
| Metric | Value | Assessment |
|---|
What is an ACH Calculator?
An ACH Calculator is an essential tool for HVAC professionals, facility managers, and homeowners to determine the Air Changes Per Hour in a specific enclosed space. ACH measures how many times the entire volume of air within a room is filtered or replaced with fresh air in one hour.
Understanding your ACH is critical for maintaining healthy Indoor Air Quality (IAQ). Whether you are sizing an air purifier for a bedroom, designing ventilation for an office, or ensuring safety in a medical facility, the ACH metric tells you if your ventilation system is powerful enough to remove contaminants like dust, allergens, viruses, and VOCs effectively.
Misconceptions often arise regarding fan speed versus actual air changes. A high-speed fan circulates air but does not necessarily change it unless it is coupled with filtration or outdoor venting. This calculator helps bridge the gap between simple airflow (CFM) and actual air purification effectiveness.
ACH Formula and Mathematical Explanation
The calculation for Air Changes Per Hour is derived from the relationship between the airflow rate of the ventilation device and the total volume of the room. The standard ACH formula is:
To use this formula efficiently, one must first calculate the volume of the room ($Length \times Width \times Height$) in cubic feet.
Variables Breakdown
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| ACH | Air Changes Per Hour | #/hr | 0.35 (Home) – 12+ (Medical) |
| CFM | Cubic Feet per Minute | ft³/min | 50 – 2000+ |
| Volume | Total Room Space | ft³ | 800 – 10,000+ |
| 60 | Minutes in an Hour | min/hr | Constant |
Practical Examples (Real-World Use Cases)
Example 1: Residential Bedroom
Consider a standard bedroom that is 12 feet long, 12 feet wide, and has an 8-foot ceiling. You have bought a portable HEPA air purifier rated at 150 CFM.
- Volume: $12 \times 12 \times 8 = 1,152 \text{ ft}^3$
- Calculation: $(150 \text{ CFM} \times 60) / 1,152 = 9,000 / 1,152$
- Result: 7.8 ACH. This is excellent for a bedroom, providing superior filtration for allergies.
Example 2: Small Office Conference Room
An office meeting room is 20 feet by 15 feet with 10-foot ceilings. The building’s HVAC provides 200 CFM of fresh air.
- Volume: $20 \times 15 \times 10 = 3,000 \text{ ft}^3$
- Calculation: $(200 \text{ CFM} \times 60) / 3,000 = 12,000 / 3,000$
- Result: 4.0 ACH. This meets typical recommendations for office spaces to reduce CO2 buildup and keep occupants alert.
How to Use This ACH Calculator
- Measure Room Dimensions: Measure the length and width of the floor and the height of the ceiling in feet. Enter these into the respective fields.
- Identify Airflow (CFM): Check the technical specifications of your air purifier, fan, or HVAC system to find the CADR (Clean Air Delivery Rate) or airflow rating in CFM (Cubic Feet per Minute).
- Input Data: Enter the CFM value into the “Airflow Rate” field.
- Analyze Results: The calculator will instantly display your ACH. Compare this number against the standards provided in the chart (e.g., >5 ACH is often recommended for sick rooms or high-risk areas).
Key Factors That Affect ACH Results
Several variables can influence the accuracy of your ACH calculation and the real-world performance of your ventilation system:
- Furniture Displacement: Large furniture (wardrobes, beds) reduces the actual volume of air in the room, effectively increasing the ACH slightly since there is less air to clean.
- Leakage and Infiltration: Drafty windows or gaps under doors allow unconditioned air to enter, potentially lowering the effective cleaning rate if the outdoor air is polluted.
- Device Placement: An air purifier placed in a corner may not circulate air as effectively as one placed centrally, leading to “dead zones” even if the mathematical ACH is high.
- Filter Efficiency: CFM ratings often assume a new filter. As HEPA filters clog with dust, resistance increases, and actual CFM drops, reducing the ACH over time.
- Fan Speed Settings: Most devices list CFM at maximum speed. Running a device on “Quiet” or “Night” mode significantly reduces CFM and subsequently the ACH.
- Room Shape: Complex room shapes (L-shaped) may impede airflow, requiring multiple smaller devices rather than one large one to achieve the calculated ACH.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is a good ACH for a home?
For general residential use, ASHRAE recommends minimal ventilation, but for air purification purposes (like removing allergens), a target of 4 to 6 ACH is often cited by experts as ideal for reducing airborne transmission of viruses.
Can ACH be too high?
While cleaner air is generally better, an ACH above 12-15 in a residential setting might cause drafts, excessive noise, and higher energy bills due to heating or cooling the rapidly moving air.
How do I calculate CFM if I only know ACH?
You can rearrange the formula: $CFM = (ACH \times Volume) / 60$. This helps you decide what size air purifier to buy for a specific room.
Does opening a window change ACH?
Yes, significantly. Cross-ventilation from windows can add widely varying amounts of ACH depending on wind speed and temperature differences, often exceeding mechanical ventilation.
Is ACH the same as CADR?
No. CADR (Clean Air Delivery Rate) is the CFM of filtered air a device delivers. ACH is a metric of how that CADR relates to the specific size of your room.
Why is my ACH result lower than expected?
If your room has high ceilings (e.g., 10ft or 12ft), the volume increases drastically, diluting the cleaning power of your device and lowering the ACH.
Does this calculator apply to negative pressure rooms?
The math is the same, but negative pressure rooms (isolation wards) have strict requirements (usually >12 ACH) and require ensuring air is exhausted out, not just recirculated.
How does ACH relate to COVID-19 safety?
Higher ACH rates (typically 6+) reduce the concentration of airborne viral particles more rapidly, lowering the probability of transmission in shared spaces.
Related Tools and Internal Resources
Calculate the required Cubic Feet per Minute for various room sizes.
Determine the heating and cooling load (BTU) needed for your building.
Size your ventilation ducts correctly to maintain proper pressure.
A comprehensive guide to selecting the right purifier based on CADR.
ASHRAE and OSHA ventilation requirements for commercial spaces.
Estimate the energy cost of running high-CFM ventilation systems.