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Portable UV chambers could disinfect PPE anywhere

Portable UV disinfection chambers that use light to inactivate virus particles could help health workers reuse personal protective equipment.
PPE (a face mask and plastic face shield) sit inside the UV disinfection box, with bright blue light illuminating its interior

Portable disinfection chambers that use ultraviolet light to inactivate virus particles could quickly disinfect personal protective equipment, researchers report.

The chambers could benefit those who need PPE in the fight against COVID-19, including emergency medical technicians, police officers, health care workers, pharmacy technicians, and others.

Researchers built two prototype chambers to evaluate PPE disinfection using different sources of UV-C light: mercury vapor lamps and light-emitting diodes (LEDs). They used the prototypes to evaluate different power levels and disinfection times with a variety of face shields and face masks used to protect workers from the coronavirus.

“There are tradeoffs in terms of cost, lifetime, and potential heat generated,” says T. Robert Harris, a research engineer at the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI). “We wanted to evaluate these issues so that when others use UV-C for disinfecting PPE, they will have information to make good choices.”

A researcher stands next to the black PPE UV disinfection box holding its lid open.
Robert Harris shows the prototype portable UV disinfection chamber, which was designed to hold at least one face shield along with face masks. (Credit: John Stone)

PPE portability is the key

The researchers wanted to provide disinfection chambers as small as possible to allow for portability. They built the chambers to accommodate face masks and at least one face shield—a curved sheet of clear plastic that covers the entire face and protects against large droplets that could contain coronavirus. The portability of the chambers could allow their use anywhere PPE disinfection is needed.

“We wanted a box that would fit on an ambulance or in a police car so that public service staff who are coming into contact with a lot of people on a regular basis would be able to disinfect their PPE,” Harris says. “This method offers an advantage over chemical disinfection because it doesn’t require drying time or risk of chemical absorption.”

“We should all use every tool we have at our disposal to combat this virus…”

Originally, the project aimed at disinfecting PPE while it was being worn by having health care workers walk past an ultraviolet source while going from one hospital room to another. That idea was dropped because the wavelengths needed to inactivate the virus—280 nanometers—can cause skin and eye damage in humans.

For that reason, the prototype portable disinfection chambers include a safety interlock to prevent the door from being opened while the UV light is on. Disinfection takes about eight minutes, depending on the intensity of UV emissions, which vary depending on the lighting source. Researchers designed the chambers to be cleaned between uses.

“Health care workers would put their face masks and face shields into the box, close the lid, and set the timer,” Harris says. “They would swap out one set of PPE while the other set was being disinfected.”

Effective UV exposure

Ultraviolet light can damage plastic items, but Harris and his colleagues didn’t attempt to evaluate how many disinfection cycles the PPE could withstand. “You would expect UV to ultimately degrade PPE materials in the same way that sunlight slowly degrades polymer materials,” he says.

The researchers designed the chambers to provide the level of UV exposure that earlier studies have shown would inactivate the closely related SARs-CoV virus by damaging its outer shell and RNA. The researchers did not attempt to evaluate the ability of the UV light to inactivate the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19.

Other engineering considerations included the need for cooling the UV sources, providing consistent exposure of the PPE to UV light using reflective walls in the chambers, and protecting the mercury vapor lamps from damage during use.

Ultraviolet light is now used in water and wastewater sanitation, food disinfection, killing pathogens in HVAC systems, and other purposes. Because of the growing number of applications, finding enough mercury vapor lamps and LED sources challenged the research program, which received funding from GTRI’s independent research and development program.

Harris hopes the project will encourage others to further develop UV-based portable disinfection systems to supplement other methods for protecting people who encounter the coronavirus.

“This work is part of a realization that multiple tools—including hand washing, surface disinfection, face masks, UV disinfection, social distancing, and other steps—are important and much more powerful when done together,” he says.

“We should all use every tool we have at our disposal to combat this virus and really think about things carefully to break every link in the chain of contagious transmission.”

Source: Georgia Tech

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