Soil filtration lines are dark soiled areas that develop gradually on
carpet. They are most common around the edges of a room next to the wall,
under floor length draperies and under doors. But they can develop anywhere
there is an air space such as between floorboards or spaces in the sub-flooring.
Also known as soil lines, smog lines and perimeter soiling (when they
occur around walls), the problem is usually more obvious close to heating
ducts, electric floor outlets, and gas valves. Bedroom doors that are
closed at night, especially where windows are left open, are likely to
develop the lines.
The soiling is caused by the passage of air through or across the carpet.
Air carries microscopic particles of dirt and soot. As air passes over
the carpet, these soil particles settle and become embedded in the carpet
pile yarns. In areas where the air flows over the carpet more rapidly
than normal, the carpet acts as a filter extracting the soil particles
from the air. The soil is very fine and has penetrated deeply into the
yarns. Special techniques by a professional carpet cleaner are usually
required to improve the appearance of soil filtration lines.
Unfortunately the discoloration cannot always be removed completely. The
degree of removal depends on the amount and type of soil, length of time
the soil has accumulated, amount of airflow color or carpet and type of
fiber. The lines can be removed form most synthetic fibers. However in
severe cases, especially on light colored carpets, traces may remain after
cleaning. It is usually very difficult to remove filtration soiling completely
from wool carpets.
The general black lines around carpet edges can be effectively removed
applying Fabpro Filtration Soil Cleaner and rinsing.