Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Unique disinfecti­on chamber which uses ozonized water

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A simple ceremony in the garden of the Health Ministry on Tuesday evening was the only activity in the launch of an important item in the battle against COVID-19 – the Vega Design Studio - Disinfecti­on Chamber.

It is the only disinfecti­on chamber in the country with the unique feature of using ozonized water rather than alcohol or chemicals which could be harmful to the human body and not environmen­tal- friendly, said the Health Ministry’s Colombo Re g i o n a l Director Dr. Indika Jagoda.

He said this disinfecti­on chamber is good to be located in any public place or at the entry of any office complex because it takes only 20 seconds for the whole disinfecti­ng process to take place for the whole body, all outer surfaces including the shoes.

Under this collaborat­ive project, Dr. Jagoda came up with the idea for such a disinfecti­on chamber, the ozonized water concept was introduced by a team from the Sri Lanka Institute of Nanotechno­logy ( SLINTEC) under the guidance of Manju

Gunawarden­a and the chamber was manufactur­ed by Dr. Harsha Subasinghe of VEGA, manufactur­ers of electric cars.

Material on the Vega Design Studio - Disinfecta­nt Chamber reveals that it is the only chamber in Sri Lanka with certified test results. It has been built with internatio­nally recognized water disinfecti­on treatment technology.

The chamber requires 220v electricit­y and a water line connection only and no other chemical. It operates on fully-automated mode, with no push buttons necessary. This simplifies the process of long- term deployment and saves potentiall­y hundreds of thousands of rupees.

It is at SLINTEC that the disinfecti­on chamber had been tested. With the testing for virus disinfecti­on, particular­ly the highly infectious new coronaviru­s, not being a viable option, it had been tested for bacterial disinfecti­on, it is learnt.

“This is valid because ‘enveloped’ viruses such as the new coronaviru­s are easier to kill using disinfecti­on liquids than bacteria,” says Dr. Jagoda, giving the average disinfecti­on rate from the chamber as being 92%.

The Sunday Times gets a glimpse of how the testing was done – a cultured bacteria had been applied on a life- size plastic test dummy, after which, to measure the baseline of bacteria, a swab test had been performed on multiple areas including the head, chest and hands.

Next the disinfecti­on had been turned on for 20 and 40 seconds, after which further swab tests had been carried out. The dummy had not been rotated or moved, like a human would be able to do during disinfecti­on.

Rotation and movement while disinfecti­on is going on, it is safe to assume, would give better coverage for disinfecti­on during regular operation, Dr. Jagoda said.

 ??  ?? The Vega Design Studio - Disinfecti­on Chamber. Pic by Sameera Weeraseker­a
The Vega Design Studio - Disinfecti­on Chamber. Pic by Sameera Weeraseker­a

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