Removing Odors After a Protein Fire in Your Nutley Kitchen
9/23/2020 (Permalink)
Three-Phase Odor Control in Nutley
Why Does My Home Smell So Bad After a Protein Fire?
SERVPRO Tackles Hard-To-Remove Odors in Your Nutley Kitchen
Kitchen fires in Nutley do not always produce the most smoke, but they often produce heavy odors due to protein burning. There may be minimal damage, but the homeowner often finds a sticky, opaque residue coating their belongings. Cleaning the residue and removing the odor is crucial to the cleanup and repair process.
How Do I Get Rid of The Terrible Odor in My Kitchen?
SERVPRO Uses a Multi-Phase Approach to Remove Odor from Your Home
A fire and odor restoration project in your Nutley home is never a simple undergoing. Even when fire damage appears minimal, smoke odor can cause long-lasting unpleasantness in your home. SERVPRO uses a multi-phase approach to attack odors. Mitigating further smoke damage from the beginning of the restoration process is vital in removing unwanted odors.
What Are the Three Phases for Deodorization?
Phase 1- Containment: Technicians use chemical counteractant like Smoke Deodorizer #302 to create a barrier, keeping odor molecules from vaporizing into the air. The barriers trap the odors at the surface, where technicians can clean the residue—allowing minimal odor molecules to escape cuts down on the following, more in-depth phases.
Phase 2- Vapor Odor Control: Technicians apply products that counteract already air-borne molecules—for example, the specially formulated Instant Odor Counteracting Beads release deodorant vapors into the atmosphere.
Phase 3- Thermal Fogging: Technicians dispense solvent-based deodorants through thermal fogging equipment. The deodorants pass through the heat, combust down to the one-half micron in size, and then dissipate through the air. Due to their small size, they reach anywhere smoke malodor molecules traveled.
For 24/7 assistance dealing with unwanted smoke odor, contact SERVPRO of Nutley / Bloomfield at (973) 662-0062. We make it, “Like it never even happened.”