If the water drop collects the smoke particles while it travels though the air, then the water from your shower travels much smaller distance than the raindrops.
(Unless the fire is in your room, but then obviously you should aim the shower at the fire. And turn off the electric power before you do that.)
If my aim is only to improve air quality of the shower area, then distance traveled shouldn’t matter, assuming density of smoke in air is close enough to constant
If the water drop collects the smoke particles while it travels though the air, then the water from your shower travels much smaller distance than the raindrops.
(Unless the fire is in your room, but then obviously you should aim the shower at the fire. And turn off the electric power before you do that.)
This seems rights to me. You’d need to get all the air in your house to cycle via the shower. Might as well get it to cycle through a proper filter.
Sorry if unclear. My original curiosity was regarding improving air quality within the shower.
Oh hmm. I’m not sure. I’d think it would, but more so the more enclosed the shower is, i.e. more so if it has a door vs a curtain.
If my aim is only to improve air quality of the shower area, then distance traveled shouldn’t matter, assuming density of smoke in air is close enough to constant