TiO2Shield Nanotechnology for a Cleaner & Greener EnvironmentEPA Recommends Photocatytic Oxidation to Destroy Germs.

TiO2 Shield - Air Purification

“Indoor Air Pollution is America’s Number One Environmental Health Concern…” Environmental Protection Agency

“Indoor Air Pollution is wide spread. You are more likely to get sick from pollution in your home and office than from pollution in the air outside…” - The American Lung Association

Problem

Sick Building Syndrome is used to describe situations in which building occupants experience acute health and comfort effects that appear to be linked to time spent in a building, but no specific illness or cause can be identified.

Symptoms of Sick Building Syndrome
• Eye irritation caused by sensation of dryness and redness
• Chronic Respiratory Illness and Asthma
• Dryness and irritation of the throat
• Headaches, lethargy, fatigue, and poor concentration
• Skin irritation caused by dryness and rash
• Solutions for Sick Building Syndrome

Pollutant source removal or modification
Periodic cleaning or replacement of filters; replacement of water-stained ceiling tile and carpeting; institution of smoking restrictions; venting contaminant source emissions to the outdoors; storage and use of paints, adhesives, solvents, and pesticides in well ventilated areas, and use of these pollutant sources during periods of non-occupancy; and allowing time for building materials in new or remodeled areas to off-gas pollutants before occupancy
 
Increasing ventilation rates and air distribution
This often can be a cost effective means of reducing indoor pollutant levels. HVAC systems should be designed, at a minimum, to meet ventilation standards in local building codes.

Air cleaning
Can be a useful adjunct to source control and ventilation but has certain limitations. Particle control devices such as the typical furnace filter are inexpensive but do not effectively capture small particles; high performance air filters capture the smaller, respirable particles but are relatively expensive to install and operate. Mechanical filters do not remove gaseous pollutants. Some specific gaseous pollutants may be removed by adsorbent beds, but these devices can be expensive and require frequent replacement of the adsorbent material. In sum, air cleaners can be useful, but have limited application.

Education and communication
These are the most important elements in both remedial and preventive indoor air quality management programs. When building occupants, management, and maintenance personnel fully communicate and understand the causes and consequences of IAQ problems, they can work more effectively together to prevent problems from occurring, or to solve them if they do.
 
Photocatalytic oxidation can be used to reduce exposure to low concentration of indoor air pollutants and improve the quality of indoor air. Low molecular weight organic compounds were nearly 100% decomposed under minimal conditions.  


Indoor Air Pollutants

People spend 90 percent of their time indoors. We are constantly exposed to many types of pollutants:
– Mold
– Carbon Monoxide
– Formaldehyde
– Volatile Organic Compound (VOC)
– Nitrogen Dioxide (NOx), Sulfur Dioxide (SOx), etc.

Sources of Indoor Air Pollutants

Formaldehyde
Formaldehyde is an important chemical used widely by industry to manufacture building materials and numerous household products. It is also a by-product of combustion and certain other natural processes. Thus, it may be present in substantial concentrations both indoors and outdoors.
Sources of formaldehyde in the home include building materials, smoking, household products, and the use of unvented, fuel-burning appliances, like gas stoves or kerosene space heaters.

Exposure to formaldehyde vapors can cause eye, nose and throat irritation; coughing; skin rashes; headaches; dizziness; nausea; vomiting and nosebleeds. Formaldehyde has also been shown to cause cancer in laboratory animals, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ranks formaldehyde as a probable human carcinogen. However, the most recent EPA estimate of the lifetime cancer risk associated with exposure to formaldehyde in homes is equal or less than 1 chance in a million of developing cancer.

Carbon Monoxide (CO)   
Sources of Carbon Monoxide can be found in unvented kerosene and gas space heaters; leaking chimneys and furnaces; back-drafting from furnaces, gas water heaters, wood stoves, and fireplaces; gas stoves; generators and other gasoline powered equipment; automobile exhaust from attached garages; and tobacco smoke.
At low concentrations, exposure to carbon monoxide can show fatigue in healthy people and chest pain in people with heart disease. At higher concentrations, impaired vision and coordination; headaches; dizziness; confusion; nausea may occur. Carbon Monoxide may also cause flu-like symptoms that clear up after leaving home. Exposure at very high concentrations can be fatal.

Volatile Organic Compound (VOC)
EPA's Total Exposure Assessment Methodology (TEAM) studies found levels of about a dozen common organic pollutants to be 2 to 5 times higher inside homes than outside, regardless of whether the homes were located in rural or highly industrial areas. Additional TEAM studies indicate that while people are using products containing organic chemicals, they can expose themselves and others to very high pollutant levels, and elevated concentrations can persist in the air long after the activity is completed.  
Sources of VOC can be found in household products including: paints, paint strippers, and other solvents; wood preservatives; aerosol sprays; cleansers and disinfectants; moth repellents and air fresheners; stored fuels and automotive products; hobby supplies; dry-cleaned clothing.  
Health Effects can range from eye, nose, and throat irritation; headaches, loss of coordination, nausea; damage to liver, kidney, and central nervous system. Some organics can cause cancer in animals; some are suspected or known to cause cancer in humans.
The ability of organic chemicals to cause health effects varies greatly from those that are highly toxic, to those with no known health effect. As with other pollutants, the extent and nature of the health effect will depend on many factors including level of exposure and length of time exposed. Eye and respiratory tract irritation, headaches, dizziness, visual disorders, and memory impairment are among the immediate symptoms that some people have experienced soon after exposure to some organics. At present, not much is known about what health effects occur from the levels of organics usually found in homes. Many organic compounds are known to cause cancer in animals; some are suspected of causing, or are known to cause, cancer in humans.  

Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2)   
Sources of Nitrogen Dioxide can be found in kerosene heaters, un-vented gas stoves and heaters, and environmental tobacco smoke.
Health Effects Associated with Nitrogen Dioxide can cause eye, nose, and throat irritation. It may cause impaired lung function and increased respiratory infections in young children.

Mold    
Molds are usually not a problem indoors, unless mold spores land on a wet or damp spot and begin growing.  Molds have the potential to cause health problems.  Molds produce allergens (substances that can cause allergic reactions), irritants, and in some cases, potentially toxic substances (mycotoxins).  Inhaling or touching mold or mold spores may cause allergic reactions in sensitive individuals.  Allergic responses include hay fever-type symptoms, such as sneezing, runny nose, red eyes, and skin rash (dermatitis).  Allergic reactions to mold are common.  They can be immediate or delayed.  Molds can also cause asthma attacks in people with asthma who are allergic to mold.  In addition, mold exposure can irritate the eyes, skin, nose, throat, and lungs of both mold-allergic and non-allergic people.  Symptoms other than the allergic and irritant types are not commonly reported as a result of inhaling mold.  


Three Dimensional Air Purification

 


1. Air flow carries the pollutants
2. Pollutants are oxidized by contacting with the treated surface.
3. Energy of indoor lighting
4. Accelerating the breakdown of any Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) by destroying the molecular chemical bond.
5. Converts tobacco smoke, urine and fecal odor, or any chemical smell into odorless and harmless substance.


Deodorization by Photocatalysis


Trimethylamine source:
body odor, rotten smell


Ammonia source: urine

Hydrogen Sulfide source: Decaying organic matter, bacteria

Antibacterial and Self-Sanitizing Surface
•  Photocatalyst is three times stronger than Chlorine and 1.5 times stronger than ozone
•  Effectively controls bacteria outbreak by eliminating organic matter on surface substrate
•  Destroys bacterial cell membrane and causing leakage of the cytoplasm, which inhibits bacteria’s activity and ultimately results in the death and decomposition of bacteria


Bacteria Decomposition Test

After 24 hours
       E.Coli without TiO2                                   E.Coli WITH Tioshield  
     ST. Auresu without TiO2                        ST. Auresu WITH Tioshield

TiO2SHIELD • P.O. Box 1102, Bethpage, NY 11714 • 516-420-5910

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