Impara i termini tecnici della purificazione dell'aria come CADR, CFM, classificazioni MERV, PM2
Impara i termini tecnici della purificazione dell'aria come CADR, CFM, classificazioni MERV, PM2.5 e ACH in linguaggio semplice e facile da capire.
When choosing or building an air purifier, three metrics determine whether it will actually clean your air effectively: CADR (how fast it cleans), MERV (how fine the particles it catches), and CFM (how much air it moves). Understanding these numbers lets you size a purifier correctly for any room.
Commercial air purifier manufacturers rarely publish honest CADR figures, and many budget models use low-grade MERV 8 filters that miss fine PM2.5 particles and airborne pathogens. By building a Corsi-Rosenthal box with a genuine MERV 13–16 filter, you get verifiable, independently tested performance at a fraction of the cost.
Use the detailed guides below to understand what each metric means in practice, how to calculate what you need for your room, and why our DIY kits consistently outperform commercial alternatives on all three measures.
MERV (Minimum Efficiency Reporting Value) è un sistema di classificazione da 1-20 che misura l'efficienza dei filtri dell'aria. Le classificazioni MERV più alte catturano particelle più piccole, ma restringono anche di più il flusso d'aria. Per i purificatori d'aria DIY, MERV 13-16 fornisce il miglior equilibrio tra filtrazione e flusso d'aria.
- MERV 13 filters capture particles down to 1 micron — including most airborne virus carriers. MERV 16 approaches HEPA performance.
- Standard HVAC filters are typically MERV 1–4. Our kits use MERV 13–16, capturing pollen, dust, PM2.5, and most pathogens.
- MERV ratings above 13 require adequate fan power — our kits are specifically designed to maintain airflow through high-MERV filters.
CADR (Clean Air Delivery Rate) è la metrica standard del settore per misurare l'efficacia dei purificatori d'aria. Indica il volume di aria pulita prodotta al minuto, misurato in piedi cubi al minuto (CFM). Un CADR più alto significa una pulizia dell'aria più rapida ed efficace.
- A higher CADR means the purifier cleans air faster. For a 30 m² room, aim for a CADR of at least 200 m³/h.
- Corsi-Rosenthal boxes achieve 300–600 CFM CADR — comparable to commercial purifiers costing 5× more.
- Look for ACH (Air Changes per Hour): for allergy or asthma sufferers, 4–6 ACH is recommended. Our kits achieve this in rooms up to 40 m².
CFM (Cubic Feet per Minute) misura il volume d'aria che fluisce attraverso un purificatore d'aria o sistema di ventilazione. È una specifica critica che determina quanto rapidamente un purificatore d'aria può elaborare l'aria nella tua stanza.
- Higher CFM = more air moved per minute. Divide your room volume (m³) by the desired air changes per hour to find the required CFM.
- Our Blanc model delivers 350 CFM; the Obsidian dual-fan variant reaches 600 CFM, covering rooms up to 60 m².
- Running costs: at 350 CFM, our kits consume 50–100W, costing roughly €35–70/year at EU electricity rates.
How to Choose the Right Specification for Your Room
Bedrooms & Small Rooms (up to 20 m²)
Target CADR 150–200 m³/h, MERV 13 filter, 150–200 CFM fan. Our Blanc Fanless Kit with a single quiet fan is ideal — low noise (under 35 dB) and sufficient air throughput for restful sleep.
Living Rooms & Offices (20–40 m²)
Target CADR 300–400 m³/h, MERV 13–15 filter, 300–350 CFM. Our Blanc Complete Kit with a 20×20 fan array achieves this reliably and meets Energy Star 2026 consumption limits.
Large Rooms & Open Plan (40–60 m²)
Target CADR 500–600 m³/h, MERV 14–16 filter, 500–600 CFM. Our Obsidian Dual-Fan Kit uses two 20×20 box fans in a Corsi-Rosenthal configuration, independently tested by Intertek to achieve 6 ACH in a 60 m² room.
All CADR and CFM figures for our kits are independently verified by Intertek using ANSI/AHAM AC-1 and ISO 16890 test protocols. See our certifications page for full test reports.