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Published: Wednesday, April 27, 2022 - 12:01 To combat Covid-19 amid supply shortages in 2020, healthcare facilities across the United States resorted to disinfecting personal protective equipment (PPE), such as N95 masks, for reuse with methods such as ultraviolet (UV) light. But questions lingered about the safety and efficacy of these methods and how best to implement them. Now, in perhaps the most rigorous examination of UV light’s effects on N95 masks yet, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have shown that these masks can be disinfected with little effect on their form or function. In a study published in the Journal of Research of the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the researchers, with help from federal and private partners, scrutinized UV-exposed N95 masks for traces of virus and looked for changes in the shape of their fibers, ability to filter out aerosols, and other properties. The results represent a key step toward devising UV standards that could have far-reaching benefits in the future. “Right now, UV technologies are really in their infancy with respect to the healthcare environment,” says NIST research chemist and senior adviser Dianne Poster, a co-author of the study. “And the data in this paper could be really instrumental in building the foundation for these applications to become more routine.” N95 masks provide a formidable defense against infectious respiratory illnesses. The “95” in N95 refers to the mask’s ability to ensnare at least 95 percent of particles as small as 75 nanometers (billionths of a meter) that may harbor harmful agents like the coronavirus. But despite the N95’s effective design, it was only intended for a single use. With demand for PPE far outstripping supply when Covid-19 first erupted in the United States in 2020, healthcare workers turned to disinfecting masks and other PPE using a handful of methods, including UV-C light, a relatively common type of UV radiation used in other germicidal applications. UV-C has been used for decades to rid air, water, and surfaces of bacteria and viruses, and the application is backed by scientific research. But with its sudden widespread application toward N95 masks, the technology was catapulted into uncharted territory, where there was little known about how to apply it effectively. To better understand how UV-C could be used to disinfect N95 masks, NIST partnered with UV-Concepts, a manufacturer of UV-C systems not currently marketed for N95 disinfection, and ResInnova Laboratories, an antimicrobial testing company. The authors of the new study fastened N95 masks to racks within a UV-Concepts system—an enclosure lined with 19 UV-C lamps and coated in a reflective surface—and blasted them with UV light for three minutes, 10 times each. The team doused some of the masks with a solution laden with OC43, a human coronavirus and close relative of the Covid-19-causing virus. After the irradiation, they summed up the number of remaining active OC43 viruses to find that the method adequately disinfected the N95 masks throughout their three layers, even inactivating up to 100 percent of viral particles in some areas. But N95 masks, disinfected or not, are only as good as their ability to do their job. “The wavelength of UV-C used for inactivation of a virus is not known to produce chemicals, such as ozone, that could damage the plastic in the N95 masks,” says NIST researcher John Wright, a co-author of the study. “But it’s still important to check.” The authors ran N95 masks through a plethora of tests to learn whether the irradiation had altered them as a whole as well as down to the individual fiber. The team viewed the fibers using an imaging technique called scanning electron microscopy, which magnified images of the masks up to 2,000 times or more. Throughout the three layers of both irradiated and nonirradiated masks, the images revealed no significant differences in the fiber size or shape between the groups. In case the UV affected more than what met the microscope’s eye, the authors looked for potential changes elsewhere. The authors measured how much the masks resisted air flowing through them to see if UV made the N95s more difficult to breathe in, Wright says. But once more, UV did not appear to make any difference. The NIST team also examined if the irradiation meddled with the N95s’ filtering ability or their mechanical properties. To determine the former, they directed a stream of salt-carrying aerosols (mimicking the size of exhaled aerosols) at the masks and counted how many flowed through. To help them calculate the latter, they pulled on strips cut from the masks with a machine called a mechanical tester. Yet again, the irradiated masks were unaltered. In parallel, experts at the CDC’s National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) also studied N95 masks irradiated in the enclosures. But despite using different methods to investigate some of the same mask traits as the NIST team, and some different aspects such as mask fit, they arrived at the same conclusion. In the future, researchers and members of the UV industry can use the authors’ data to take initial steps toward understanding how different levels of UV-C radiation affect N95 mask performance and cleanliness, a necessity for standardizing these methods. What’s more, the study demonstrates the benefits of collaboration when standard methods are limited and there is a need for many experts, capabilities, and facilities across disciplines. “Personally, as a private, independent laboratory, I have found it highly rewarding to be able to work with both a federal agency and a manufacturer on this project,” says ResInnova Laboratories president and chief executive officer, Matthew Hardwick, a study co-author. “UV standards developed through collaborations such as this could help us respond to the next emergency we encounter where the PPE supply chain is strained,” Poster says. Paper: Dianne L. Poster, Matthew Hardwick, C. Cameron Miller, Michael A. Riley, W.W. Shanaka, I. Rodrigo, Andras E. Vladar, John D. Wright, Christopher D. Zangmeister, Clarence Zarobila, Jeremy Starkweather, John Wynne and Jason Yilzarde. “Disinfection of Respirators with Ultraviolet Radiation.” Journal of Research of the National Institute of Standards and Technology. First published March 25, 2022, on the NIST blog. Quality Digest does not charge readers for its content. We believe that industry news is important for you to do your job, and Quality Digest supports businesses of all types. However, someone has to pay for this content. And that’s where advertising comes in. Most people consider ads a nuisance, but they do serve a useful function besides allowing media companies to stay afloat. They keep you aware of new products and services relevant to your industry. All ads in Quality Digest apply directly to products and services that most of our readers need. You won’t see automobile or health supplement ads. So please consider turning off your ad blocker for our site. Thanks, Founded in 1901, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is a nonregulatory federal agency within the U.S. Department of Commerce. Headquartered in Gaithersburg, Maryland, NIST’s mission is to promote U.S. innovation and industrial competitiveness by advancing measurement science, standards, and technology in ways that enhance economic security and improve our quality of life.Ultraviolet Light Can Clean N95 Masks for Reuse Without Hindering Performance
NIST examines disinfection methods that could be critical in the future if PPE supply is low
Researchers at NIST have discovered that, under specific conditions, UV can adequately disinfect masks without causing any unwanted alterations. The findings mark a key step toward the development of standard, science-backed UV disinfection methods that could be critical in the future if the PPE supply is low. Credit: NIST.
The N95 mask owes its remarkable filtering ability to its three-layer structure. While the fibers in the outer- and innermost layers block large particles such as water droplets, the middle is where much finer, charged fibers electrically attract and trap tiny, submicron aerosols. Credits: SEM images by A. Vladar/NIST, animation by J. Wang/NIST.
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Comments
What about disinfecting with ozone?
I have a CPAP cleaning machine that uses ozone. Can I clean N95 masks with it?
Ozone disinfection