TitleProduct

60w Far UVC Bulb UVC Light 222 Nm Disinfection Excimer Lamp

  • Price:

    Negotiable

  • minimum:

  • Total supply:

  • Delivery term:

    The date of payment from buyers deliver within days

  • seat:

    Guangdong

  • Validity to:

    Long-term effective

  • Last update:

    2022-04-29 02:21

  • Browse the number:

    208

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Company Profile

Zhengzhou Uvwave Electronic Technology Co., Ltd

By certification [File Integrity]

Contact:lizhongwei(Mr.)  

Email:

Telephone:

Phone:

Area:Guangdong

Address:Guangdong

Website:http://www.uvwavetek.com/ http://lizhongwei.beitools.com/

Product Details

FEATURES

1. Environmentally friendly/mercury-free

2. Safe disinfection technology

3. Wide operating temperature

4. Instantaneous on/off

5. Large production capacity

6. No degradation in output over the life of the lamp

7. Spectrum testing by the third-party

8. EPA, ISO9001, CE certified



SPECIFICATIONS

1. Model no.: UWB222-60W

2. Peak Wavelength: 222nm

3. Size: 28*300mm

4. Input Voltage: 24vDC

5. Power: 60w

6. Beam Angle: 360°

7. Radiation Intensity: 6000μw/cm²(0cm)

8. Operating Temperature Range: -10°C - 150°C

9. Materials: Quartz glass, Polymer end caps, Krcl noble gas

10. Lifespan: 4000 hours



APPLICATIONS

Air disinfection

Surface disinfection

Water disinfection

Room sanitisation

Sanitisation for public places



Inactivation of microorganisms by newly emerged microplasma UV lamps

The application of microplasma far-UVC lamps(60w far uvc bulb, uvc light 222 nm, disinfection excimer lamp) for microbial inactivation was studied. A new general kinetic model was provided for microbial reactivation studies. The microplasma UV induced nucleic acid repair-deficiency disorder. Results for a model ssRNA virus illustrates far-UVC susceptibility of SARS-CoV-2.

Pathogenic microbes are becoming one of the biggest health-threatening challenges leading to a global need for sustainable solutions. Ultraviolet radiation enables the control of microorganismal replication. However, microbes with protected and/or repairable nucleic acids have challenged the inactivation efficacy of current UV sources. Targeting proteins responsible for nucleic acid protection and repair or microbial infection can be game-changing. Here, we identified and kinetic-modelled the efficiency of a new mercury-free radiation technology: microplasma UV, which radiates around proteins’ UV-absorption and decomposition peak with unique spectral power distributions. Surrogates for challenging microorganisms were studied: Escherichia coli bacterium that contains nucleic acid reactivation proteins, and bacteriophage-MS2 virus that possesses viral proteins responsible for protecting nucleic acid and initiating infection (maturation).



The microplasma UV lamp photons, at wavelengths below 240 nm, induced nucleic acid repair-deficiency disorder and enhanced inactivation of viral infectivity. Both studied microplasma UV sources presented higher germicidal efficiency for MS2 and significantly lower repair for E. coli compared with the standard values reported for mercury UVC lamps and UVC light emitting diodes (UVC Leds) in the literature. The reactive oxygen species were found to not play a role in this enhancement. The present results introduce promising UV sources for efficient and long-lasting microbial inactivation, thereby paving the way toward sustainable disinfection systems.


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