top of page

Far-UVC light: A new tool to control the spread of airborne-mediated microbial diseases

Frixos Georgallides

David Welch, Manuela Buonanno, Veljko Grilj, Igor Shuryak, Connor Crickmore, Alan W. Bigelow, Gerhard Randers-Pehrson, Gary W. Johnson & David J. Brenner





Airborne-mediated microbial diseases such as influenza and tuberculosis represent major public health challenges. A direct approach to prevent airborne transmission is inactivation of airborne pathogens, and the airborne antimicrobial potential of UVC ultraviolet light has long been established; however, its widespread use in public settings is limited because conventional UVC light sources are both carcinogenic and cataractogenic. By contrast, we have previously shown that far-UVC light (207–222 nm) efficiently inactivates bacteria without harm to exposed mammalian skin. This is because, due to its strong absorbance in biological materials, far-UVC light cannot penetrate even the outer(non living) layers of human skin or eye; however, because bacteria and viruses are of micrometer or smaller dimensions, far-UVC can penetrate and inactivate them. We show for the first time that far-UVC efficiently inactivates airborne aerosolized viruses, with a very low dose of 2 mJ/cm2 of 222-nm light inactivating >95% of aerosolized H1N1 influenza virus. Continuous very low dose-rate far-UVC lightin indoor public locations is a promising, safe and inexpensive tool to reduce the spread of airborne- mediated microbial diseases.

1 view0 comments

Comments


Commenting has been turned off.

Tel: +357 99643209

G.Z. Icarus 222 Ltd

Registered in Cyprus

Blog

UV222_logo.png

UV222® is a registered trademark of UV Medico A/S

UVMLOGOBLUE.png

G.Z. Icarus 222 Ltd is the Authorised Distributor

of UV Medico® UV222 products

to Cyprus, Greece

and the film industry in the United Kingdom

© 2025 by Icarus 222. Powered and secured by Wix

  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
bottom of page