Right now I live in a climate with extreme humidity (Bangkok, Thailand). Closing the windows and doors helps keep out the sticky/moist air and raise the comfort level, but I’m concerned that I might be depriving my brain of oxygen especially during my night hours.
The room is fairly small, I would guess about 180 square feet. Is running low on oxygen a real concern if I close all the windows and doors for say 16 hours?
If you’re in doubt, put a potted plant in there to convert your outgassed carbon dioxide back into oxygen. Or, learn to live in a hot climate with a ceiling fan. My wife and I lived in a room smaller than that in Indonesia, with no AC, we never closed the doors or windows.
Your house is not airtight. I have never heard of anyone suffocating because they didn’t open up windows or doors (unless they were in South Korea and a fan was involved, of course)
I don’t think this has to be a binary discussion around suffocating or not suffocating. Hopefully someone with more knowledge than me can comment on air quality and whether it goes down if the windows aren’t open.
The room is not sealed, so air from outside will enter the room and replace oxygen used up by your breathing. It may be down slightly but will soon establish a stable level.
Define air quality? There will be sufficient oxygen for you to breath. It may start smelling a bit rank over time.
I’m afraid “air quality” is completely subjective, but I think knowing the actual numbers helps better understand what’s involved.
NASA, figures their astronauts need 0.84 kg/day of oxygen to perform their duties.
The air in your room is .3 kg/m3 so you you only need about 3 cubic meters worth of air to supply your oxygen needs. It looks like your room is probably something like 40 m3 of air, so you’re well above NASA standards for oxygen.
I would think most other issues of “air quality” would be self apparent. For example, the feeling of suffocating is triggered by a build up of CO2, not from a lack of O2, so if the CO2 levels of the room were getting too high, you would feel it.
The real issue is carbon dioxide not oxygen. You’ll suffer ill effects from too high a concentration of carbon dioxide in the air you’re breathing before you suffer any effects from too low a concentration of oxygen. So ventilation is more about decreasing excess carbon dioxide rather than increasing oxygen.
This post shows the rate at which carbon dioxide builds up. Their bottom line is you’d die in about twelve days in a 4800 cubic foot sealed room. This post uses a smaller 1000 cubic foot sealed room and says you’d have about twelve hours. But it’s worth noting that both of these posts are assuming the room is sealed.
If closing the doors and windows makes it less sticky inside, then you must have air conditioning, which will either suck out air or blow in air, so there’s nothing to worry about.
However, I have often felt that in classrooms the oxygen gets depleted and it’s hard to concentrate. (Air condition was/is rare here.) It would be interesting to test carbon dioxide and oxygen levels in various rooms over time.
Home A/C recirculates the air inside the room, the piping going to the compressor outside is for the heat exchanging fluid that soaks up heat from the air inside and dumps it outside, there’s no air exchange.