Abstract
Germicidal ultraviolet lamps outputting 222 nm light (GUV222) have the potential to reduce the airborne spread of disease through effective inactivation of pathogens, while remaining safe for direct human exposure. However, recent studies have identified these lamps as a source of ozone and other secondary pollutants such as secondary organic aerosol (SOA), and the health effects of these pollutants must be balanced against the benefits of pathogen inactivation. While ozone reactions are likely to account for much of this secondary indoor air pollution, 222 nm light may initiate additional non-ozone chemical processes, including the formation of other oxidants and direct photolytic reactions, which are not as well understood. This work examines the impacts of GUV222 light on SOA formation and composition by comparing limonene oxidation under GUV222 and O3-only control conditions in a laboratory chamber. Differences between these experiments enable us to distinguish patterns in aerosol formation driven by ozone chemistry from those driven by other photolytic processes. These experiments also examine the influence of the addition of NO2 and nitrous acid (HONO), and investigate SOA formation in sampled outdoor air. SOA composition and yield vary only slightly with respect to GUV222 vs ozone-only conditions; NO2 and HONO photolysis do not appreciably affect the observed chemistry. In contrast, we observe consistent new particle formation under high-fluence 222 nm light (45 µW cm-2) that differs dramatically from ozone-only experiments. This observed new particle formation represents an additional reason to keep GUV222 fluence rates to the lowest effective levels.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting information for: "Organic aerosol formation from 222 nm germicidal light: ozone-initiated vs. non-ozone pathways"
Description
The supplement includes a detailed description of experimental methods and analysis techniques, plots representing data from all experiments, results from a simple box modeling study, and results and discussion of the photolysis of HONO under GUV222 light.
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