The main point of the 6 air changes (or higher) is to continuously dilute the air, in case there is a small source of leakage. If you simulate a pinhole leak in a pipe, at the pressure you operate, that is a possible operating scenario that could happen since a tiny leak may not be noticeable to your system, but will slowly build up in the room if un-ventilated. In the past I think the program I used was Pipe-Flo (although it's been a while and I don't have that now).
Once you determine a possible gas leakage rate, you make sure you have a high enough fresh airflow rate to keep that gas from building up in your room to a concentration above the explosive limits.
The higher air change/purge is for the less likely events where the gas piping is actually damaged, and you have a big release. It's likely that air change number doesn't dilute it while the release is happening, but it will slow it down, and also once it's fixed, it will clear the room out faster.
Also the 6 air changes are likely cooling your space as well, so make sure that airflow is keeping your room temperature acceptable if you have a limit.