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Components of Light

Sunlight is a source of electromagnetic energy including radio waves, infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, x-rays, gamma rays, and cosmic rays. Visible light can been seen because its wavelengths can be detected as various colors by the human eye. Ultraviolet, although invisible, also has various wavelengths and properties.

Components of Light

Air Mixing Is Key to
UV-C Effectiveness

Anywhere people congregate there is a risk that an infected person will exhale droplet nuclei carrying disease. Germicidal UV should be installed throughout buildings where a significant hazard of airborne infection has been identified. Hospitals, clinics, prisons, treatment centers, and similar institutions are especially susceptible. Air mixing is vitally important to provide disinfection of total room air.

How UV-C Works

Types of Ultraviolet Light

UV SpectrumUV-A, UV-B, and UV-C are part of the ultraviolet spectrum and we are exposed to some of each type of UV light every day. UV-A is also known as "blacklight" and is generally harmless. It results in skin tanning and is used in medicine to treat certain skin disorders. UV-B has a very high penetrating ability and prolonged exposure is responsible for some types of skin cancer, skin aging, and cataracts (clouding of the lens of the eye).

UV-C, also known as ultraviolet germicidal irradiation (UVGI), has extremely low penetrating ability and is nearly completely absorbed by the outer, dead layer of skin where it does little harm. It does reach the most superficial layer of the eye where overexposure can cause redddening and painful but temporary irritation, but it cannot penetrate to the lens of the eye and cannot cause cataracts.

Microbe with broken DNAWhy Germicidal UV Is Effective

Germicidal UV has a specific wavelength of 253.7 nanometers (billionths of a meter) and is known to deactivate (break the DNA of) microorganisms contained in tiny airborne droplets (droplet nuclei) that transmit diseases such as measles, tuberculosis, and influenza from person to person. Once the DNA of a microbe is broken it loses its ability to reproduce. Bacteria and viruses that can not reproduce are rendered harmless. Germicidal UV has been used safely and effectively in hospitals, clinics, laboratories, and industry for more than 50 years.

Electric lamps, resembling ordinary flourescent lamps, are especially designed to emit germicidal UV and include a glass envelope to filter out harmful, ozone forming radiation. The lamps must be mounted in special housings and located so that people are not exposed to direct irradiation. A variety of fixture designs maximize UV-C in a room by mounting the units from the ceiling, from walls, and in corners and corridors. Sanitas offers a complete line of UV-C products.