Sounds like you use bad air purifiers, or too few, or run them on too low of a setting. I live in a wildfire prone area, and always keep a close eye on the PM2.5 reports for outside air, as well as my indoor air monitor. My air filters do a great job of keeping the air pollution down inside, and doing something like opening a door gives a noticeable brief spike in the PM2.5.
Good results require: fresh filters, somewhat more than the recommended number of air filters per unit of area, running the air filters on max speed (low speeds tend to be disproportionately less effective, giving unintuitively low performance).
Sounds like you use bad air purifiers, or too few, or run them on too low of a setting. I live in a wildfire prone area, and always keep a close eye on the PM2.5 reports for outside air, as well as my indoor air monitor. My air filters do a great job of keeping the air pollution down inside, and doing something like opening a door gives a noticeable brief spike in the PM2.5.
Good results require: fresh filters, somewhat more than the recommended number of air filters per unit of area, running the air filters on max speed (low speeds tend to be disproportionately less effective, giving unintuitively low performance).