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Ozone generation and chemistry from 222 nm germicidal ultraviolet light in a fragrant restroom

Published

Author(s)

Michael F. Link, Rileigh Robertson, Andrew Shore, Behrang Hamadani, Christina Cecelski, Dustin Poppendieck

Abstract

Devices using 222 nm germicidal ultraviolet light (GUV222) have been marketed to reduce virus transmission indoors with low risk of occupant harm from direct UV exposure. GUV222 generates ozone, an indoor air pollutant and oxidant, under constrained laboratory conditions, but the chemistry byproducts of GUV222-generated ozone in real indoor spaces is uncharacterized. We deployed GUV222 in a public restroom, with an air change rate of 1 h−1 one weekend and 2 h−1 the next, to measure ozone formation and byproducts generated from ozone chemistry indoors. Ozone from GUV222 increased background concentrations by 5 ppb on average for both weekends and reacted rapidly (e.g., at rates of 3.7 h−1 for the first weekend and 2.0 h−1 for the second) with gas-phase precursors emitted by urinal screens and on surfaces. These ozone reactions generated volatile organic compound and aerosol byproducts (e.g., up to 2.6 ug m−3 of aerosol mass). We find that GUV222 is enhancing indoor chemistry by at least a factor of two for this restroom. The extent of this enhanced chemistry will likely be different for different indoor spaces and is dependent upon ventilation rates, species and concentrations of precursor VOCs, and surface reactivity. Informed by our measurements of ozone reactivity and background aerosol concentrations, we present a framework for predicting aerosol byproduct formation from GUV222 that can be extended to other indoor spaces. Further research is needed to understand how typical uses of GUV222 could impact air quality in chemically diverse indoor spaces and generate indoor air chemistry byproducts that can affect human health.
Citation
Environmental Science: Processes and Impacts
Volume
26

Keywords

222 nm germicidal ultraviolet light, indoor air quality, restroom

Citation

Link, M. , Robertson, R. , Shore, A. , Hamadani, B. , Cecelski, C. and Poppendieck, D. (2024), Ozone generation and chemistry from 222 nm germicidal ultraviolet light in a fragrant restroom, Environmental Science: Processes and Impacts, [online], https://doi.org/10.1039/D4EM00144C, https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=957547 (Accessed October 14, 2024)

Issues

If you have any questions about this publication or are having problems accessing it, please contact reflib@nist.gov.

Created May 20, 2024, Updated September 5, 2024