Guest guest Posted July 8, 2004 Report Share Posted July 8, 2004 Despite the rising popularity of indoor air cleaners, off-the-shelfproducts cannot effectively remove chemical gases that pollute homes,schools and offices, according to a Syracuse University study. Dear IAQ Members, There is a technology available which DOES remove VOC's and it is not available off the shelf...yet. It utilizes photocatalysis in combination with UVGI (ultraviolet germicidal irradiation and has been extensively tested under funding from NASA and developed in conjunction with the Univ. of Wisconsin. It removes over 99.8% of all bacteria, viruses, mold spores, dust, dander and VOC's. I will provide any interested party with information about how and where to obtain more details about this technology. It is state of the art and I doubt the Syracuse study covered it as it is not yet available in off the shelf machines...but will be very soon, both in commercial/industrial units and in units designed for the consumer. Regards, ph K. SchulmanFounder/CEOGold Bond Building Services, Inc. andMobility Solutions, Llc.Corporate Offices:805 Cross St. Suite 4Lakewood, NJ 08701-4099Gold Bond Main Phone: Mobility Solutions Main Phone: Toll Free: 1-877-811-REST (7378)Fax: E-Mail: JSchul6938@... info@...http://www.restassured.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 9, 2004 Report Share Posted July 9, 2004 ph, What you describe sounds very much like the RGF Environmental Photohydroionization system which is currently available through RGF's Certified Commercial Dealers. If the system you describe is different, in what way is it different? Ron > In a message dated 7/7/2004 8:43:57 PM Eastern Standard Time, > 520020231544-0001@T... writes: > > Despite the rising popularity of indoor air cleaners, off-the-shelf > products cannot effectively remove chemical gases that pollute homes, > schools and offices, according to a Syracuse University study. > Dear IAQ Members, > > There is a technology available which DOES remove VOC's and it is not > available off the shelf...yet. It utilizes photocatalysis in combination with > UVGI (ultraviolet germicidal irradiation and has been extensively tested under > funding from NASA and developed in conjunction with the Univ. of Wisconsin. It > removes over 99.8% of all bacteria, viruses, mold spores, dust, dander and > VOC's. I will provide any interested party with information about how and where > to obtain more details about this technology. It is state of the art and I > doubt the Syracuse study covered it as it is not yet available in off the shelf > machines...but will be very soon, both in commercial/industrial units and in > units designed for the consumer. > Regards, > > ph K. Schulman > Founder/CEO > Gold Bond Building Services, Inc. and > Mobility Solutions, Llc. > Corporate Offices: > 805 Cross St. Suite 4 > Lakewood, NJ 08701-4099 > Gold Bond Main Phone: > Mobility Solutions Main Phone: > Toll Free: 1-877-811-REST (7378) > Fax: > E-Mail: JSchul6938@a... > info@r... > http://www.restassured.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 10, 2004 Report Share Posted July 10, 2004 ph, What you describe sounds very much like the RGF Environmental Photohydroionization system which is currently available through RGF's Certified Commercial Dealers. If the system you describe is different, in what way is it different?Ron Dear Ron, I am not familiar with RFG's system, however the one I described uses BOTH photocatalysis and ultraviolet germicidal irradiation in sequence as the air is drawn thru the unit...not sure if RFG's system does that. Can you send me a link to their web site as I would like to compare the systems. Regards, ph K. SchulmanFounder/CEOGold Bond Building Services, Inc. andMobility Solutions, Llc.Corporate Offices:805 Cross St. Suite 4Lakewood, NJ 08701-4099Gold Bond Main Phone: Mobility Solutions Main Phone: Toll Free: 1-877-811-REST (7378)Fax: E-Mail: JSchul6938@... info@...http://www.restassured.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 10, 2004 Report Share Posted July 10, 2004 I wrote to The Post-Standard, the publisher of the article below and asked for the evaluated types of indoor air cleaners. It would be interesting to see the final report on this. Ingrid Schuetz > Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2004 07:59:18 -0700 (PDT) > > Subject: Re: Many air cleaners miss gases > > Any way to find out what machines were evaluated? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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