Beat infections with paper clothing
New Sanitising Technology
Sets Stage For Self-Sterilising Fabrics
Imagine, walking out of a
contaminated environment without a worry because you have on clothes that
sanitise themselves. Researchers working to develop personal protective
equipment that might contain the spread of infectious diseases, such as the
devastating 2014 outbreak of Ebola in West Africa, have developed a paper-based
sanitiser that may one day be suitable for clothing that sterilises itself.
And the technology at work
is inexpensive as well, according to the researchers. The invention consists of
paper with thin layers of aluminium and hexagon honeycomb patterns that serve
as electrodes to produce plasma, or ionised gas. Explaining the use of paper,
Aaron Mazzeo, an assistant professor at Rutgers University in the US and one of
the researchers involved in the study , said, “Paper is an ancient material,
but it has unique attributes for new, high-tech applications.“
“We found that by applying
high voltage to stacked sheets of metallised paper, we were able to generate
plasma, which is a combination of heat, ultraviolet radiation and ozone that
kill microbes,“ Mazzeo added.
The fibrous and porous
nature of the paper allows gas to permeate it, fuelling the plasma and
facilitating cooling.
“To our knowledge, we are
the first to use paper as a base to generate plasma,“ said Jingjin Xie, lead
author of the study , published in the journal `Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences'.
In experiments, the
paperbased sanitisers killed more than 99% of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (a yeast
species) and more than 99.9% of E coli bacteria cells. Most E coli bacteria are
harmless and an important part of a healthy human intestinal tract. However,
some types can cause diarrhoea, urinary tract infections, pneumonia and other
illnesses.
“Preliminary results showed
that our sanitisers can kill spores from bacteria, which are hard to kill using
conventional sterilisation methods,“ said Qiang Chen, a doctoral candidate at
Rutgers. In the future, the paper-based sanitisers may also prove suitable for
devices that sanitise laboratory equipment and smart bandages to heal wounds,
among other uses,the researchers said.
Washington AGENCIES
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