Understanding ozone for your home

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Ozone expert Guy Gruett takes a deep dive into what ozone is and how it works. There is a real barrier of understanding of what ozone is “Most people are not bothered by it at all, as long as they know it’s going to do that (disinfect water)”, according to Guy.

What is ozone

“Most people have heard of ozone thanks to media coverage about pollution and the ozone layer. But for many, that is where their knowledge ends.” according to Gary. Ozone is formed when oxygen is activated and three molecules bond together temporarily and have powerful cleaning abilities.

How does ozone work

To understand how ozone works you need a basic chemistry lesson.

Gary outlines “In its normal state, oxygen exists as two atoms bound together (O2). Ozone is unstable. That extra oxygen atom wants to hook up with other material, like unwanted microorganisms in water filtration systems. For the purpose of disinfecting water, ozone comes in contact with contaminants and pathogens that can damage equipment and get in the water supply. The extra oxygen atom oxidizes the contaminant and the O3 becomes O2—just plain old oxygen.”

There are two ways to make ozone. Through a corona discharge which is similar to how ozone is made when lightening occurs or ultraviolet light, which uses the sun ’s rays to creates the ozone that also protects the earth’s atmosphere.

Ozone Benefits

Ozone doesn’t have any harmful by products and reverts back to oxygen automatically.

“Ozone’s short half-life, which is believed to be less than 30 minutes, makes it even less of a risk to homeowners. Then it fades away after that point, or expends its energy and becomes regular oxygen” explained the expert.

Ozone also makes life simpler because there isn’t a need to buy chemicals to replenish them. Ozone is produced in your own home with a generator and runs on electricity and oxygen, the only two ingredients to disinfect water.

Chemical free with ozone

The main benefit of ozone is that it is an ideal substitute for chlorine potassium permanganate that is used to disinfect water by the municipality.

There are also inherent risks “potassium permanganate or blue water could start coming out of a homeowner’s faucet and a young child would think it was Kool-Aid” if there was a mechanical malfunction Gary remarked.

Chlorine is toxic after all and leaves behind byproduct called trihalomethanes (THMs), which are known carcinogens.

“Because the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency imposes strict regulations on THM levels in domestic water, ozone is becoming the disinfectant of choice for many municipal water treatment plants as well.”

 

Ozone is safe

Ozone is increasing in popularity in U.S. residential water treatment as an alternative to chlorine and potassium permanganate disinfection. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved ozone for bottled water production in the 1980s, and it is now approved for food processing. The time has come for ozone to become a standard in residential water treatment as well.

As more manufacturers develop residential ozone technologies, new options will be available to customers.

Read the full article here.

 

 

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