What is Carbon Monoxide (CO)?
Carbon Monoxide is a colorless, odorless, extremely poisonous and explosive gas that causes hundreds of accidental deaths and
over 1000 injuries each year in Canada. CO is slightly lighter than air and mixes throughout the atmosphere. It is a by-product
of incomplete combustion, produced when fuels such as natural gas, propane, heating oil, kerosene, coal, charcoal, gasoline, or
wood are burned with insufficient air. What is Carbon Monoxide (CO)?
Effects of CO Poisoning
When a person breathes Carbon Monoxide, it is absorbed by hemoglobin, the oxygen carrying protein in the blood. "Carboxy
hemoglobin" is then formed, replacing oxygen, preventing its release in the body and eventually causing suffocation.
- Mild Exposure: Flu-like symptoms including slight headache, nausea, vomiting and fatigue.
- Medium Exposure: Severe headache, drowsiness, confusion and a fast heart rate. Prolonged exposure to medium levels of CO can result in death.
- Extreme Exposure: Loss of consciousness, convulsions, heart and lung failure, possible brain damage and death.
While everyone is at risk for CO poisoning, unborn babies, infants and young children, senior citizens and people with heart and
lung problems are at a higher risk due to their greater oxygen needs.
Possible Sources of CO
- Gas stoves
- Hot water heaters
- Fireplaces
- Lawnmowers
- Pilot lights
- Gas or oil furnaces
- Car exhaust fumes
- Wood burning stoves
- Charcoal
- Gas space heaters
- Tobacco smoke
How to Prevent CO Poisoning
- Inspect flues and chimneys for cracks, corrosion, holes, debris or blockages.
- Buy fuel-powered heaters with automatic shut-off features.
- Service heaters before first use of winter season.
- Open windows periodically to air out your house. Homes with energy efficient insulation can trap CO-polluted air inside.
- Use a gas stove for cooking purposes only.
- Operate gas burning appliances in a well-ventilated room.
- Never leave a car running in a garage, particularly an attached garage.
- Use charcoal grills outdoors, never indoors.
- INSTALL AND MAINTAIN CARBON MONOXIDE DETECTOR(S)
If Your CO Detector Alarms
If your CO detector sounds and anyone in the house has symptoms of CO poisoning;
Get everyone out of the house immediately and call 911. Do not re-enter your home until the fire department,
the gas company, or a licensed technician has checked it.
If your alarm goes off and no one has symptoms of CO poisoning;
- Turn off all fuel burning appliances that are possible sources of CO
- Open windows to air out house
- Contact the gas company or a licensed technician to investigate the problem
Choosing a CO Detector
There are three types of CO detectors available. While each has specific features and qualities, all will alert owners to danger.
Biomemetic CO Detector
- Gel cell of synthetic hemoglobin absorbs CO
- Combination battery and sensor module
- Battery sensor module must be replaced every two to three years, but the detector should last about 10 years
- After an alarm, the sensor should clear itself within two to 48 hours when left in fresh air. If it not cleared, it
will sound again when put back in the detector. If the sensor does not clear itself after 48 hours, it must be replaced
Semiconductor CO Detector
- Plug in module measures CO build-up on an electronic sensor
- Highly selective to CO gas
- Lasts from five to ten years
Electrochemical CO Detector
- Fuel cell electro-chemical sensor
- Eight day data-logging memory records peak and accumulated CO levels
- Responds differently to three levels of CO exposure
- Self-powered battery replacement is not required
- Detector will last for at least five years
For all CO detectors, a continuous alarm signals a full alarm, a repetition of loud pulsating beeps means there is a CO build-up,
and a short chirp every minute alerts you to a malfunction or low battery.
Installing a CO Detector
Install CO detectors near bedroom areas and family rooms. Do not install them near air vents or fans. Place them in the center
of the room where they can measure the overall general atmospheres. For extra protection, place one about 15 feet away from your
home's heat source.
To avoid nuisance alarms, do not put a CO detector in the kitchen, garage, utility room, bathroom, or unventilated rooms where
cleaning supplies are kept. Chemical fumes, humidity and very hot or very cold temperatures will affect the performance of a
detector.
Look for These Features When Purchasing a Detector
- Stops automatically within minutes when fresh air clears CO
- Manual reset button and test button
- Digital warning light and light to indicate power is on
- Horn or alarm that sounds 85 decibels
- Approval from a testing laboratory, such as Underwriters Laboratory
- Battery/sensor pack on battery-operated models that lasts a few years
Maintenance and Testing
Keep CO detectors dust free by vacuuming vents regularly. Test CO detectors each week simply by pressing the Test/Silence button
to make sure that the alarm sounds. If the detector fails to test properly, replace immediately.