Home > LATEST NEWS > Boston University validates Signify UV-C Sterliziling lamp for coronavirus deactivation

Boston University validates Signify UV-C Sterliziling lamp for coronavirus deactivation

A tube lamp rendered the virus 99% inactive in the lab, and could hit nearly 100%. Signify is  ready to share the technology.

A Boston University researcher works with a coronavirus sample and Signify UV-C lighting,  decked out in what looks like a deluxe suit of PPE. (Photo credit: Image courtesy of Signify.)  Signify today announced that Boston University has determined that a Signify ultraviolet (UV)  light source would almost always deactivate the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 if dosed at  the right level.  The university’s National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories (NEIDL) exposed  materials containing the virus to a UV-C tube lamp from Signify. It found that a dose of 5  mJ/cm2  resulted in “a reduction of the SARS-CoV-2 virus of 99% in 6 seconds.” (SARS-CoV-2  is the more scientific name for the novel coronavirus).  The NEIDL team extrapolated that a stronger dose of 22 mJ/cm2  would result in a reduction of  99.9999% in 25 seconds.

 “Our test results show that above a specific dose of UV-C radiation, viruses were completely  inactivated: In a matter of seconds we could no longer detect any virus,” said team leader  Anthony Griffiths, associate professor of microbiology at Boston University. “We’re very  excited about these findings and hope that this will accelerate the development of products that  can help limit the spread of COVID-19.”  The results come less than two months after Signify CEO Eric Rondolat said the company would  gear up its UV disinfection research and products amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Rondolat today said that Signify plans to share the university-validated technology with other  lighting companies. It was not immediately clear whether Signify will license it or offer it  through some other means.

 “Given the potential of the technology to aid the fight against the coronavirus, Signify will not  keep the technology for its exclusive use but make it available to other lighting companies,”  Rondolat said today. “To service the growing need for disinfection, we will increase our  production capacity multifold in the coming months.”

Signify provided Boston University with a 35W Philips TUV light source emitting at around 254  nm, LEDs Magazine has learned. Philips TUVs are tubular UV lamps aimed at the germicidal  market, typically used for air and water disinfection and similar applications.

Signify, formerly called Philips Lighting, still uses the Philips product brand name. It has been  offering UV products for over three decades.

The Signify lamp at Boston University appears not to be a newly developed one but to have  come from Signify’s existing stable, using mercury discharge technology, which is a more  established method for disinfection lighting than are LEDs.

 “There are applications in which UV-C LEDs can be used, but the majority of our focus is  currently on conventional UV-C lamps as these are still much more effective than UV-C LEDs,”  a Signify spokesperson told LEDs. “However, we do have a UV-C LED module which is  designed to fit appliances where conventional mercury discharge lamps are too big to be  integrated, such as refrigerators, coffee machines, air humidifiers, ice makers (and the like).”

Some industry experts might dispute that mercury discharge is more effective than LEDs for  disinfection. But mercury is probably less expensive. Research into the use of UV LEDs  continues, including both UV-A-band and UV-C band studies, and interest has run high in  commercial products for disinfection and sanitation applications.

A corona zapper could conceivably have applications in many settings, including hospitals,  public transportation, offices, retail stores, and supermarkets to name just a few. It would come  with the caveat that UV-C can be dangerous if not used or designed into end products correctly,  as LEDs has been reporting. Indeed, on June 18 Bob Karlicek, director of the Center for Lighting  Enabled Systems & Applications (LESA), will address both fact and fiction regarding UV-C for germicidal applications in a live webcast.

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