The bottleneck might be the air in the room

(blog.mikebowler.ca)

203 points | by gslin 3 hours ago

38 comments

  • gpt5 2 hours ago
    I really wish a Apple or another major OEM would integrate CO2 monitor into watches or smartphones. Suddenly, everybody would be aware of the CO2 level in the room, get alerts, etc. and the problem will just solve itself.

    There are so many rooms, classrooms, movie theaters and other places with poor ventilation where you just feel dizzy, or fall asleep, not knowing it was just due to lower oxygen levels in your blood. Raising awareness is the only real solution.

    • microtonal 11 minutes ago
      I think the issue is that the common tech requires sensors in an air-chamber. E.g. NDIR works by firing IR at a frequency that is absorbed by CO2. A sensor on the other side either measures the amount of IR light that got through (optical NDIR) or pressure/sound waves (photoacoustic NDIR). I guess that it's hard to use any existing sensors, because they are relatively large and probably water could easily get into the chamber.

      Would be extremely cool if Apple, Samsung, and others can crack this, though I think they'd have done it already if it was easy.

    • stein1946 49 minutes ago
      > Raising awareness is the only real solution.

      You'd have to raise awareness on every single person in the room and them sustain pressure to the organization in order to have proper CO2 levels in the room/organization.

      And then you have to align every other person on every other organization to do this as well and hope for the best.

      Or, you can do the right thing and have the state introduce regulations

      • b112 31 minutes ago
        I can just imagine the horrors and skin crawls that your last sentence has evoked in some people's minds. Not the state!!

        But seriously, so much care needs to be taken here. OK, well "care" at least. Employers certainly would benefit from scrubbing CO2 from the air, in terms of productivity. I'm willing to bet that with central air it would be quite easy, and even with heat and AC off, lots of places still circulate the air regardless.

        So the central place to scrub is already there.

        But then you have other issues. Such as, will your body adapt to 8 hrs of reduced CO2, and then you become torpid and barely awake when not at work. Such a horrid thought, that is to me. And what if employers learn that the tiniest boost of O2 helps too! Now your body becomes accustomed to that, and what are the long term effects there?

        I can personally envision myself being concerned. I guess the legislation could be crafted to "the same CO2 levels found just outside of downtown city core" or some such blather. Maybe even same for O2. So that you're at least pegged to something normal for the area.

        Maybe that's where the state could come into play. A simple, highly accurate monitoring station which has an API to be polled.

        Come to think of it, CO2 and O2 rates fluctuate during the 24 hour cycle. Trees need O2 to live, but only produce O2 during the day. And so differing amounts of light might mean up and downs in these numbers. It may be another circadian rhythm. Getting it the same as in a nearby forest, might be the healthiest thing of all.

        • floam 17 minutes ago
          You’re talking about oxygen like it’s California Rocket Fuel or meth.
        • atoav 21 minutes ago
          It is not that complicated. You need to introduce CO₂ threshold levels that make sense from a medical standpoint. Then you need to enforce them in the same way other basic environmental regulations or worker rights are enforced in regions of the world where these work.

          The main question is: If your workplace, city, whatever forces you to work or live in an harmful/unhealthy environment, do you have any realistic course of action to improve the situation? In the US you would call this (gasp) regulation, I would call it a basic human right.

          If we talk about stairways, nobody complains about building regulations that mandate handrails. CO₂ levels are not totally different.

    • legulere 1 hour ago
      I guess the problem is with the price of the sensors. Just look how expensive the Aranet 4 home shown in article is. There are worse devices for less like the IKEA alpstuga. I also don’t know how much electricity they pull.
      • Liftyee 1 hour ago
        I would hesitate to say the IKEA is worse. Inside the IKEA is a reputable Sensirion all in one sensor module. It's much cheaper and smaller because the CO2 sensor in it is using different (newer) technology that only released a few years ago from Sensirion.

        (Upd: the IKEA does have lower accuracy, with ±100 ppm instead of ±30 ppm. From the SEN63C datasheet)

        • yoshuaw 4 minutes ago
          Worse specs? Sure. Worse value? I don't think so. Worse accuracy? Wellll, maybe also not.

          A price of 30 EUR makes this sensor really easy to pick up. For the same price as one Aranet (~180 EUR) the typical household can place a sensor in every room of the house. Which provides far more accurate readings for the whole house than just one high-end sensor in one room.

        • microtonal 23 minutes ago
          No, it is crap. Yes, it is Sensirion, but it uses a thermal conductivity sensor, which is a very indirect method of measuring CO2. One part of the sensor emits heat and the other senses it and the idea is that heat transfer changes with different CO2 concentrations. However, a lot of other factors influence this as well, such as ambient temperature/humidity (which is why the sensor incorporates measurements from an SHT sensor), but also gas mixture, etc. You only get good readings at lab conditions. Even below 1000 ppm, I would often see readings that are 300 ppm from more expensive, known-good CO2 meters.

          If you want a CO2 meter on the cheap, either wire up an optical NDIR sensor like the SenseAir S88 (22 Euro) up to an esp32, which is possibly the best sensor you can get for the money (slightly cheaper version of the sensor that the AraNet4 uses). Or if you want something standalone with a display, get the SwitchBot Meter Pro CO2 for ~50 Euro, which uses a photoacoustic NDIR, but is still miles better than the sensor in the ALPSTUGA. Can also be hooked up with HA through an ESPHome BLE proxy or with the SwitchBot Hub.

          You can find a comparison of the IKEA sensor with other affordable sensors here:

          https://danieldk.eu/hardware/smart-home/ikea-alpstuga

          (Upd: the IKEA does have lower accuracy, with ±100 ppm instead of ±30 ppm. From the SEN63C datasheet)

          You forget to mention that it is ±100ppm plus ±10% of the ambient ppm, which makes a big difference. At 1000ppm it's ±(100ppm + 0.10*1000) = 200ppm and that's only in an environment with 25C, 50% RH, and 1013 mbar. So, that does not tell you much, given that thermal conductivity is very sensitive to environmental factors.

          • nok22kon 15 minutes ago
            if you just want to know if CO2 is too much, 300ppm precision is fine.

            I dont need to know the exact level, just give me a green/yellow/red LED and make it cheap so I can have a sensor in every room

            • microtonal 14 minutes ago
              No, it's not. You generally want to ventilate an office when you reach 1000ppm, but then the IKEA will often warn you already at 700ppm. 700ppm is fine.
      • Gigachad 1 hour ago
        I got the ikea sensor, I’d say it’s way more accurate than you need for personal use. I wouldn’t use it as a scientific instrument but it’s well good enough to see if the room is ventilated enough.

        I was shocked to see just how fast CO2 climbs while in a room, and how just opening the window just a crack was enough to restore the room to baseline co2.

        The thing runs on usb 5v so the power consumption is negligible. It also plugs in to home assistant great.

        • microtonal 18 minutes ago
          I have HA send me a notification to ventilate my office when the air reaches 1000ppm CO2. The IKEA ALPSTUGA is often off by 300ppm even under 1000ppm. If I'd use it, I'd be getting notifications at 700ppm.

          It is a thermal conductivity sensor, which is a very indirect way of measuring CO2 and is very sensitive to environment factors. You only get somewhat good readings in lab conditions.

          Don't by the ALPSTUGA for anything but very rough trends, there are much better affordable options.

          • Gigachad 11 minutes ago
            Within 300 ppm is more than good enough. Realistically 1000 ppm is not that bad. The average meeting room is multiples of that.

            Also in my experience it’s much more accurate than that.

            • microtonal 8 minutes ago
              I notice that thinking becomes less clear when going above 1000ppm, so I let HA send a notification at 1000ppm. With ALPSTUGA it would send already at 700ppm. By the way, above 1000 the divergences become even larger due to the inaccuracy also being 10% of the ambient CO2 concentration (in optimal circumstances, probably larger IRL). So, suppose you want to be notified at 2000 ppm, the IKEA sensor might already do so at 1500 or 1600 ppm and it continuously drifts, so it's not like you can use a particular offset.

              Besides that, what's the point? There are much better meters in a similar price class. As an additional benefit, they can last months or up to a year on two AA batteries.

              ALPSTUGA is an inferior product.

        • odiroot 56 minutes ago
          Can it work with Zigbee network or is Matter/Thread required?
          • embedding-shape 46 minutes ago
            I'm using a bunch of IKEA's "smart home" stuff, all via Zigbee+HA, works great. Look for the Zigbee icon on the package, and the pairing for Zigbee vs their own home controller might have slightly different pairing sequence on the device, otherwise it just seems to work.
            • microtonal 16 minutes ago
              ALSTUGA does not work with Zigbee.

              They recently overhauled their lineup and replaced all Zigbee devices by Thread + Matter. Some of the new devices (mostly those who support TouchLink, e.g. some of the lights) have a secret pairing mode with which you can use them with Zigbee, but it's only a subset of the new products.

          • Gigachad 36 minutes ago
            It’s part of the new range which is all matter over thread only. The existing ikea hub can do thread though.
        • p-e-w 1 hour ago
          > The thing runs on usb 5v so the power consumption is negligible.

          There’s a huge leap from that to the power consumption being low enough to be integrated into a smartphone, as demanded by OP.

          • progval 50 minutes ago
            I don't think power use is the issue. I have this cheap CO2 sensor: https://www.domadoo.fr/en/devices/5882-heiman-zigbee-air-qua... which draws 0.5W. This includes thermometer and humidity sensor, Zigbee transmission, and acting as a Zigbee router, but it gives us an upper bound. It also measures continuously (picks up someone breathing on it within 10s), which is overkill. A phone could measure CO2 levels once every 10 minutes which would average under 0.01W, so that would work.

            However, this assumes the sensor would fit in a smartphone, which is not a given. And these things need air flow. And they also wouldn't work while the phone is in a bag or a pocket.

      • SideburnsOfDoom 1 hour ago
        > I also don’t know how much electricity they pull.

        It can't be much, since the Aranet 4 can run for years on 2 AA batteries.

    • zeafoamrun 33 minutes ago
      I was looking at CO2 sensor module boards this week and the sensors themselves are quite large and the floor price is $15ish.
      • bjackman 25 minutes ago
        And I believe the accuracy is also not great on these cheap ones. The product in the OP's photo costs $200 where I live! And ISTR finding the sensor itself contributes a lot to this cost.

        IIUC they also need fans. The one I have in my home has one that's actually integrated into the sensor unit.

    • aaron695 1 hour ago
      [dead]
    • scoot 2 hours ago
      Apple watches already have a blood-oxygen sensor so it's covered, albeit indirectly.
      • oasisbob 1 hour ago
        I don't think that's true at all. Capnography, the measure of carbon dioxide partial pressure is wholly separate from pulseox:

        > Pulse oximeters have some limitations. They can only employ light at two wavelengths. Thus the devices can only distinguish between hemoglobin and oxygenated hemoglobin. When carboxyhemoglobin and methemoglobin are also present, there are two additional wavelengths required for differentiation. In the presence of elevated carboxyhemoglobin levels, pulse oximetry overestimates the true saturation of oxygen as carboxyhemoglobin binds with a higher affinity than oxygen. In the case of carbon monoxide poisoning, the absorbance spectrum of carbon monoxide is very similar to hemoglobin, which results in a falsely high level of oxygen (overestimation of oxygen saturation) ...

        https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK539754/

      • Terr_ 1 hour ago
        I don't think that's safe to assume at all, for two reasons:

        1. CO2 has effects on the human body of its own that aren't simply a lack of oxygen, and vice-versa. [0]

        2. The baseline proportions involved aren't close, so even doubling CO2 isn't going to show up easily as a large swing in in oxygen%.

        For example, the article references a study where the CO2 proportion going from 0.04% -to 0.25% correlates to mental problems.

        Even if the watch could sample atmosphere directly, is it sensitive enough to detect a shift from 21.00% -> 20.79% oxygen?

        As it's estimating oxygen in the owner's blood, it might not detect anything different at all... not if the owner's body has already compensated by breathing harder or by "underclocking" their brain to make dumber decisions.

        [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asphyxiant_gas

        • ErroneousBosh 1 hour ago
          > The article references a study where the CO2 proportion going from 0.04% -to 0.25% causes mental problems. In other words, a difference in 0.21% of the air.

          I'm finding that pretty difficult to believe, to be quite honest with you.

          And before you say "aha, carbon dioxide brain fog!" consider that I'm about a mile from the sea with a 40mph onshore breeze. This air is about as oxygenated as it gets.

          • anon7000 45 minutes ago
            It makes a lot of sense actually. You get severe symptoms when CO2 makes up only a couple % of the air. And can become fatal at like 5%. There’s not like a hard line where you suddenly die, it’s a gradual thing. It very much makes sense that we’d notice minor symptoms at a few thousand PPM when it only takes like ten thousand to feel it severely.
          • Terr_ 1 hour ago
            1% (10,000 ppm) is enough for the person to become aware something is odd through drowsiness or an elevated heart rate.

            I don't think it's too far-fetched for a quarter of that to cause subconscious cognitive effects, that could be measured in tests.

  • zerop 2 minutes ago
    I tend to agree with this observation. I started taking my evening calls (6:30 to 10:30 PM everyday) from my terrace in open air and my overall fatigue became quite less and I feel quite less tired compared to earlier time when I used to take these calls from my room.
  • deanc 2 hours ago
    I’m not saying this isn’t a legitimate concern but this really seems to have exploded amongst the tech community as the next obsession.

    I see this pop up on X every few weeks. Is the concern about this really based on actual science? Is there empirical data proving people are less productive or are damaging themselves as a result of heightened CO2 levels? And I don’t mean observational epidemiology studies.

    • bjackman 14 minutes ago
      IMO it's something where an intervention is often cheap enough that it's worth it even without great evidence.

      But also bear in mind that regardless of "are we operating at max effectiveness", OSHA sets a legal limit of 5000ppm in a workplace, and that's about _safety_.

      This article is talking about keeping levels below 1000 which is a very high standard IMO (still arguably justified given the studies mentioned). But if you are in a poorly ventilated home office you could easily hit 3000. At that point you are closer to "illegal in the US" than "earth's atmosphere".

      So yeah even if you are unconvinced about micro-optimising your CO2 levels there's a very long established argument in favour of at least paying _some_ attention to it.

    • nok22kon 3 minutes ago
      how can you detect without a study if CO2 meters are basically nowhere?

      https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4892924/

    • kashishgrover 1 hour ago
      • deanc 34 minutes ago
        This is not a peer-reviewed study. It's a Tom Scott youtube video.
      • Krutonium 1 hour ago
        Somewhat unrelated, Tom also did a great video where he was put in a low oxygen environment. Similarish effects, differentish cause.
    • ifwinterco 35 minutes ago
      It's peak HN meme material because 1) it (allegedly) affects your intelligence which everyone here values highly 2) you can measure it, it's a number 3) requires tech to measure it

      So perfect for HN, you can obsess over numbers and tech and how to measure it endlessly and overhype the significance to trick yourself into thinking you're doing something useful.

      You get to have your cake and eat it, no wonder everyone loves this topic.

      (Also if you're a doomer type you can link this in with rising atmospheric co2 levels for extra points)

    • eastbound 33 minutes ago
      I’ve lived in Australia and France and I’ve always attributed the taller size of Australians to the excellent state of their ventilation in buildings. Vents (and rooms themselves) are systematically bigger than in France, and if you live in a healthy environment, with meat, lots out outdoors during teen age, and correctly ventilated classrooms during their 20 best years, it makes no secret to me that they grew bigger.

      Meanwhile in France we heat classrooms by stacking 35 kids in a confined space. It saves on heating, plus condensation that makes windows opaque helps pupils concentrate on the blackboard, as teachers said during my childhood.

      • puttycat 13 minutes ago
        France is indeed ridiculously bad at ventilation (not to mention air conditioning). Restaurants, offices, even gyms - most have bad to non-existing ventilation. Coming from the States this is just insanity.
  • Tossrock 2 hours ago
    Submarines operate in the 1000s of PPM CO2 range and the sailors aboard generally do not experience any ill effects. This was tested and no deficits were found even at 15,000 PPM: https://asma.kglmeridian.com/view/journals/amhp/89/6/article...
    • w-m 1 hour ago
      I don't think you can cleanly compare this: In the study, they added CO2 to the room, while keeping O2 at normoxic levels throughout the experiment. In your meeting room, O2 levels will be dropping in lock-step with the CO2-levels rising. It may be the lack of oxygen that leads to drowsiness, not the additional CO2. But it's the CO2 levels that you can measure as a good proxy of overall air quality.
      • KerrickStaley 1 hour ago
        I don't think this is correct. The concentration of CO2 in air is about 0.04%, whereas the concentration of oxygen is 20%, so the partial pressure of oxygen is about 500x higher. This means that if, for example, 10% of the oxygen in a room spontaneously disappeared, it would be replaced about sqrt(500) = 22x faster through leaks in the room than a 10% spontaneous CO2 increase would dissipate. (This ignores a small effect due to the different density of the two gases).

        So in practice the oxygen level can never drift meaningfully far from the atmospheric pressure, whereas carbon dioxide easily can because the pressures involved are so low.

        • w-m 58 minutes ago
          Ok, fair points, including the sister comment, it's likely not a drop in O2 levels.

          But then why can we see problems with concentration in studies of people in poorly ventilated rooms, but not replicate that when just adding CO2 to normal air? What is the CO2 that we can measure in meeting rooms actually a proxy for?

          • tux3 35 minutes ago
            The Satish 2012 study that seems to have started this trend was a small cohort of 22 people split in 6 smaller groups where they also just injected pure CO2 in a small room. There have been several attempts to reproduce, which sometimes found no clear effect, or a significantly smaller effect.

            This original study has been used to market these CO2 monitors for years, but the evidence is quite thin and doesn't support a strong effect. It seems likely that there is a small effect, and it has been wildly exaggerated thanks to a small study with N=22.

      • hahahaa 1 hour ago
        O2 is 200000ppm so if co2 goes up 400 to 2000ppm does o2 go down to 198400ppm?
    • Robin_Message 1 hour ago
      If that study was of submariners, is it possible long-term high-level exposure causes the body to adapt?

      I am suspicious of 0.1% having a significant effect though, given oxygen is around 20% and we naturally exhale a couple of percent CO2.

      • pishpash 40 minutes ago
        I mean that can't be right, as the body's breathing response is triggered by that amount of CO2 buildup. It's not about what's in the air. It's about what the body can take up. Maybe submariners are self-selected to be more physically fit, e.g. larger heart, lung capacity etc. to compensate.
    • brookst 2 hours ago
      Though that study included a 45 minute acclimation period. Appropriate for submarines, but I wonder what the results would be in the first 1 / 5 / 10 minutes.
      • threatripper 1 hour ago
        CO2 levels will rise much more slowly to such high levels even in a small room.
    • culturestate 1 hour ago
      One key difference is that submariners are rigorously trained to operate effectively in less-than-ideal environmental conditions, whereas Bob from accounting probably is not.
  • swe_dima 0 minutes ago
    if I travel and expect to be working I now bring a CO2 meter
  • microtonal 36 minutes ago
    Two tips: if you want a stationary CO2 meter in a room, you can make one very cheap with a SenseAir S88 sensor (22 Euro) and hooking it up to an ESP board. Flash ESPHome and you can get live statistics in your Home Assistant dashboard. The S88 is a pretty good optical NDIR Sensor that auto-calibrates by putting it in the outside air or in a well-ventilated room every N-days (N is in the data sheet). A bit more info about hooking up the S88:

    https://danieldk.eu/hardware/smart-home/esphome-senseair-s88

    If you want something with a display that works on batteries without spending over 200 Euro for an AraNet, the SwitchBot Meter Pro CO2 is pretty good option. It is regularly on offer below 50 Euro. It uses photoacoustic NDIR, but does not deviate a lot from the S88. You can use it without a SwitchBot by configuring it with a phone on Bluetooth. The meter works on external power and battery, but even when on battery, you can set the reporting interval to 5 minutes, which is good enough in practice. The meter broadcasts the measurements with Bluetooth LE, so if you want to get the data in Home Assistant, you can place a ESPHome Bluetooth LE Proxy in the vicinity [1]. This is an ESP32 flashed with ESPHome that listens on Bluetooth LE advertisement and forwards them to your HA instance over WiFi. Of course, you could also get the SwitchBot Hub, but what is the fun in doing that? :)

    I would avoid the Ikea ALPSTUGA, it uses a thermal conductivity sensor, which is a very indirect method for measurements and it's often several hundred ppm off.

    https://esphome.io/components/bluetooth_proxy/

    • bjackman 21 minutes ago
      As a middle ground I can also recommend this unit: https://apolloautomation.com/products/air-1

      Looks like it's increased in price unfortunately but I like the idea, it's basically just what you would do as a DIY project but ready built. So you can either use it like a normal commercial product, or you can just fork the ESPHome config that's on GitHub and flash it exactly like any normal ESPHome project.

    • dgellow 29 minutes ago
      Thanks for mentioning that, last week I got 2 SwitchBot hub mini, 3 temperature sensors each, for 70€ total, they are really neat. Even put one in our fridge, I didn’t expect the signal to pass but it’s working :)

      Will look at adding the CO2 monitoring

  • oasisbob 1 hour ago
    There needs to be a meter for the amount of AI writing in blogposts. Same physics, same climb, same afternoon fog.
    • salahadawi 27 minutes ago
      I've actually been tracking the front page of HN for AI posts for a while now: https://www.salahadawi.com/hacker-news-ai-detector

      This post evaluates to 99% AI generated.

    • naet 1 hour ago
      This reads to me as AI generated. Apparently it's still good enough to the general audience to be the #1 post on HN right now though. Which is honestly a troubling signal for the state of the world...
    • stavros 1 hour ago
      Yeah, it's really tiring reading Claude's output all day, every day. Nowadays I yearn for a different style.
  • kashishgrover 1 hour ago
    Oh this is absolutely so relevant and I wonder if there are any high quality studies that have analyzed driving performance against CO2 buildup in cars. Cars often ship with circulate air feature in the aircon, and people use it aggressively, nonchalantly at least where I live, having no idea about the dangers of possible hypoxia and sleepiness that might be inducing in them while driving. It is absolutely critical in my opinion for cars to have CO2 monitors. We put so many sensors in cars these days that this seems to be a really cheap and fairly high value of life addition that could possibly prevent accidents on roads. I keep a portable CO2 sensor in my car at all times, because sometimes circulation is not something I can avoid when stuck in traffic or when passing by a drain.
    • npunt 1 hour ago
      Got a firsthand experience with this. I was dropping off my girlfriend and we stopped to talk in the car, with all the windows up. Over the course of the conversation we got more and more agitated at each other until I had a thought and pulled my Aranet out from my backpack. It was >3000ppm CO2. We opened windows and within 2 minutes all the agitation went away.
    • infofarmer 1 hour ago
      Yeah, I measured over 5000ppm in a taxi with two passengers. Showed the driver how to enable air intake (he didn’t know about the feature) and tried to explain this is deadly. Pretty sure this is commonplace globally.

      Generally it’s a miracle to me so many people survive traffic on public roads, statistically.

    • _thisdot 1 hour ago
      Relevant video of someone experimenting with a CO2 monitor in a car: https://youtu.be/hr9w-ZixAqc
    • ErroneousBosh 1 hour ago
      Cars are not sufficiently sealed for that to make any kind of a difference.
    • esikich 1 hour ago
      Cars aren't hermetically sealed vessel. This is hilarious.
      • kashishgrover 1 hour ago
        You think that’s stopping CO2 buildup?
  • materialpoint 27 minutes ago
    Goes a long way to prove that industrial air conditioning is absolutely abysmal. If air conditioning actually worked satisfactorily, opening a window should never be necessary unless you want the cold waft of air, while the air conditioning actually delivered high-quality, low-CO2 air without smell. Instead any room at > 20% capacity is quickly filled with CO2 and the putrid smell of bad mouth and body odour. I get it that perfect ventilation would be way more expensive, but at the current level it is just bad, and the windows are sealed shut. It does not make sense from a human perspective.
  • throwaway81523 2 hours ago
    Don't forget too, if the CO2 is 1000 ppm, then half of the air in each breath you inhale was recently exhaled by someone else. Yes, airborne viruses are still spreading. I still wear an N95 mask whenever I'm in an indoor space with other people outside of home.

    IKEA now has a remarkably cheap ($35) air quality monitor that measures CO2 as well as PM:

    https://www.ikea.com/us/en/p/alpstuga-air-quality-sensor-sma...

    I don't have one yet but plan to pick one up soon. A CO2 sensor alone from Adafruit is $50+, though that one is more precise. I bought it a while ago and it's still sitting in my todo bin.

    • bebe9494i4 2 hours ago
      I do not give a damm about masks, but yet another reason to prefer work from home.

      Flu and other air transmited diseases should be treated as a workplace injury, with proper compensation!

    • boernard 1 hour ago
      could you observe an effect on your health after starting to wear the mask? like sickness days per year?
    • hypfer 56 minutes ago
      Doing that all the time might not be the best idea for your immune system and neither for the respiratory one too.

      The first needs to occasionally see new threats to stay up to date and healthy. The second will not like the constantly restricted airflow.

  • rikschennink 1 hour ago
    “That number matters more than it looks.”, then the next paragraph starts with “Here is the uncomfortable part”, and then I closed the tab.
  • Aperocky 43 minutes ago
    This article is rated 100% on my AI smell meter, making it less trustworthy despite convincing arguments.

    For instance, I'm now really only sure that author measured a 2000 ppm CO2 in a meeting room once. Everything else could just be LLM trying to invent convincing argument.

  • zh3 57 minutes ago
    For the DIYers, it's simple to get an SCD4x sensor and hook it to a pi, arduino, ESP32 etc (then use CC to create a live web interface). I did this after trying an Inkbird CO2 monitor, which gets reasonable scores in reviews and wanting a live web report in the office.

    Interestingly the Inkbird and the SCD4X quite often diverge by anything up to hundreds of PPMs; I kind of back the SCD4x (on a Pi in my case) for accuracy after lots of experimentation, reading the datasheet and ensuring the correct calibration procedurs are followed (basically expose the sensors to outside air once a week).

    It's also interesting how much it varies day to day in my one-person office - possibly down to how windy it is outside, even with windows closed one day it never goes about 800ppm, other days it'll hit 1500ppm by lunchtime if I don't open a window.

    N.B. Quite possible the Inkbird uses an SCD4x internally, seems reasonable kit so I have no explanation for the differences in readings.

  • nenadg 35 minutes ago
    At some point I worked with a team of ~10 people, and we did sprint plannings in 20sq meters room from 10am to 5pm. It was like everyone was high
  • skrebbel 14 minutes ago
    I wonder how many high impact political decisions (eg EU treaties) have been made in rooms like these.
  • ccozan 43 minutes ago
    I wonder if the corona times trend to WFH and jump to Teams/Zoom/etc meetings instead of physical meetings had/has a positive effect in regards to this.
  • gwd 53 minutes ago
    I noticed this effect really strongly at university. There was one particular lecture hall that was effectively buried in the side of a hill; I can't count how many times I had an early afternoon lecture in there (so it had been in use since 8am), where I just could not focus or stay awake. Assuming sleep deprivation was the problem, afterwards I'd head out and lie down on a bench to take a nap, only to find myself wide awake. I have no trouble taking cat-naps when I'm actually tired, leading me to eventually conclude it was CO2 / O2 in the room that was the culprit.
  • _def 2 hours ago
    > Then, somewhere in the second hour, the room quietly gets worse at making them.

    Maybe it's not just the air but also the multi-hour meetings that drive people to a sense of "oh god let this finally end now", which leads do decisions that fall short.

  • hanspagel 49 minutes ago
    Not gonna happen in Germany. I don’t think I‘ve ever seen a windowless room here and it’s common to open all windows at once for a few minutes, just to replace as much air as possible:

    Stoßlüften.

  • lexoj 38 minutes ago
    I remember some years ago after coming from work at 6 pm I was dead tired at home thinking it was due to hard work during the day. Then one summer day decided to code side projects on my balcony and I was building until midnight full of energy.
  • sohpea 1 hour ago
    A reasonably popular brand's product that uses an NDIR sensor revealed to me just how much the CO2 level increases each night in my two bedrooms.

    One of them seems to have much worse ventilation to the extent that it reaches double the level. Opening the window slightly 24/7 keeps it low.

    My fiance's chronic headaches/migraines/idk became noticeably less frequent after this change and when they do occur it's usually because the window was accidentally left closed.

    Anybody who struggles with this kind of thing might want to try checking their levels. Or just open a window I guess?

  • sixtyj 2 hours ago
    A lot of CO2 is bad for thinking.

    CO2 is just a tip as office or home is toxic environment anyway. Plastic (e.g. carpets), formaldehyde in furniture, air fresheners… add home office and cooking at home (-> small carcinogenic particles)…

    If you start reading How not to die by Michael Greger, you find out that dust, soda and sitting - not CO2 - are real killers…

    It's similar to how people think sharks and airplanes are the biggest killers - when in reality it is coconuts, mosquitoes, and motorcycles.

    • bebe9494i4 1 hour ago
      My previous employer had dogs shit on carpets, without proper desinfection! Just smearing excrements into carpet, waiting for it to dry out, so it can go airborne!
    • _def 2 hours ago
      How do you avoid/reduce exposure to dust? Genuine question
      • Dove 1 hour ago
        Air filters, decluttering, regular deep cleaning, replacing dust-friendly surfaces and furniture (such as carpet, drapes, and upholstered sofas) with things like wood, vinyl, or leather. HVAC maintenance, cleaning, and filters. Washable allergen covers for things like pillows and mattresses.
      • hobofan 1 hour ago
        HEPA-filter air purifier and a robot vacuum that is scheduled to run while your are not in the apartment (to reduce baseline dust) are probably the most simple/cost-effective measures.
      • throw-the-towel 1 hour ago
        Use an air purifier, wear a respirator outside if you live in a polluted place.
        • Gigachad 1 hour ago
          Air purifier is good for PM2.5 and other microscopic pollutants but it doesn’t do that much for dust unless it’s particularly light dust and very close to the purifier.

          Dust is much more likely to just settle on the ground and be kicked back up than it is to move all the way to the purifier to get stuck in the filter.

  • eitau_1 1 hour ago
    Can someone provide an explanation why CO2 concentrations above 1000 ppm have such a negative influence given the fact that CO2 concentration in lungs (at rest) never falls below 10000 ppm?
    • Terr_ 55 minutes ago
      I'm not a doctor, but I would consider it in terms of flow and throughput, rather than,—metaphorically—the amount of water the pipe can hold.
    • fer 1 hour ago
      It simply makes the baseline higher. If you want to go to extreme cases, check carbogen

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbogen

  • bambax 30 minutes ago
    > Open a window.

    In most office buildings (towers) that's impossible. You have to deal with what the A/C gives you.

  • JoshTriplett 1 hour ago
    One easy way to fix this for many people's bedrooms or home offices: look at your HVAC system, and there's probably an option to have the fan run all the time, even if the heat or air isn't running. Turn that on, and your home's CO2 levels will drop substantially.
  • red75prime 1 hour ago
    Does it work the other way around? Does breathing air with 0% CO2 improve human cognitive performance? I haven't been able to find any research on the effects of lower CO2 concentrations.
  • joshuaS98 35 minutes ago
    Why did your startup fail? The CO2 was sitting at 1.000 ppm
  • fractallyte 17 minutes ago
    Aranet detectors are superb, and – best of all! – made in Latvia.

    Support European!

    https://aranet.com/en/home

  • a1371 2 hours ago
    The building science community has not buy and large came to the agreement that the CO2 itself is the cause of the cognitive decline. It could be the Canary in the coal mine telling us there is an accumulation of compounds causing the decline.

    Why that matters? You need good ventilation regardless, but instead of just thinking of CO2, try to minimize compounds in your air by selecting things for the room that smell less and off-gas less.

  • jwpapi 2 hours ago
    Buying one of these gadgets killed my brain fog
  • vasco 1 hour ago
    Similar to this a closed motorcycle helmet without air circulation increases CO2 extremely rapidly, within 60s it's already at really high levels. Open your visor when you stop!
  • marouen19 40 minutes ago
    Just open the door
  • Scroll_Swe 1 hour ago
    I am able to open the windows at home and at work but have to be reminded to air out, but I always feel much clearer when I do.

    Also, take walks. I am lucky to be able to walk to and from work and it helps immensely.

  • 217 2 hours ago
    i love seeing things i saw on twitter two years ago at the front page of hn man like what are we doing
  • keiferski 2 hours ago
    Yet another reason to have meetings while walking outside: air quality and a natural limit on time, and the mental benefits that come from movement.
    • sapiogram 2 hours ago
      Requires an area around your office that isn't ugly or overrun with cars.
      • vineyardmike 57 minutes ago
        It needs to be safe (including from pollution), but you could absolutely just walk around the parking lot.
      • Scroll_Swe 1 hour ago
        Scandinavia wins again :)
    • gostsamo 2 hours ago
      requires that everyone is comfortable walking and has no physical impairments.

      Not to talk about the weather either.

  • glub103011 7 minutes ago
    [dead]
  • kennywinker 2 hours ago
    > You gather your most expensive people into a room to make your most important decisions.

    A terrible way to make decisions.

    • sixtyj 2 hours ago
      What should be a better way?
      • hahahaa 1 hour ago
        Make them mostly async, bringly only the very pointy details that need nutting down sync. If knowledge transfer is needed in a meeting that could be done seperately.

        Put it this way do you need to book a 3h meeting with your spouse to decide if to buy a house? Nope all the research and decision criteria were in advance. That final minute of making the decision is a cross check over that work.