Your Ozone Air Purifier Is Poisoning You
Several manufacturers are currently selling ozone generators as
air cleaners. The companies manufacturing these devices state
they are safe and effective at controlling indoor air pollution;
however, for almost a century health professionals and health
organizations such as the American Lung Association have
challenged these claims.
Sellers of ozone-producing devices often use fanciful terms to
describe ozone. It is referred to in such terms as "activated
oxygen" or "pure air", which suggest that ozone is merely a
healthy kind of oxygen. However, ozone is a toxic gas which has
vastly different chemical and toxicological properties compared
to oxygen.
Ozone is a molecule composed of three atoms of oxygen, as
opposed to the oxygen we normally breath, which has two. The O2
molecule is stable and nonreactive, whereas the O3 molecule is
unstable, tending to dissociate and produce an O2 molecule and
one single ionized oxygen atom. This single atom acts as a "free
radicle", that is, it reacts with other nearby substances and
changes their chemical composition. It is this ability to
combine with other substances that forms the basis of
manufacturers' claims that it binds up organic particles in the
air and removes them from circulation.
Unfortunately, the same chemical properties which allow ozone to
react with organic material in the environment also give it the
ability to react with similar organic material in the body, with
potentially harmful health consequences. When inhaled, ozone can
damage the lungs, and it is considered an undesirable substance
that is a component of smog.
Inhalation of ozone at even low amounts can cause respiratory
problems and throat irritation. In addition, ozone worsens
chronic respiratory diseases such as asthma and impairs the
body's natural ability to fight respiratory infections.
A generally accepted theory of aging states that the cells of
the human body age both due to genetic factors (loss of cell
telomeres) and oxidative damage by free radicals. People are
encouraged to eat a diet high in antioxidants, and many take
antioxidant supplements, precisely to avoid the kind of damage
caused by reactive substances such as ozone.
Most people recover from acute exposure to ozone, but according
to a 1996 EPA study, long-term exposure may cause permanent lung
damage. The EPA regards ozone as an air pollutant and has
formulated air quality standards to enable local officials to
warn the public when ozone levels in urban areas are excessive.
When ozone (and other air pollutants) are high, asthmatics and
patients with chronic lung disease are encouraged to stay
inside, and healthy people are told to refrain from strenuous
outdoor exercise which raises their breathing rate in the toxic
air. Since people are advised to avoid ozone in the outdoor
environment, it is difficult to understand why anyone would buy
a device to purposely produce it within their own homes.
The FDA requires ozone output of indoor medical devices to be
less than 0.05 ppm. The Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) requires that workers' exposure to ozone
not exceed an average concentration of more than 0.10 ppm for 8
hours. The National Institute of Occupational Safety And Health
(NIOSH) recommends an upper limit of 0.10 ppm which should not
be exceeded even briefly. EPA's National Ambient Air Quality
Standard for ozone is a maximum 8 hour average outdoor
concentration of 0.08 ppm.
The EPA coined the phrase "good up high -bad nearby" to
differentiate between ozone in the upper and lower atmosphere.
Stratospheric ozone in the upper atmosphere about 10 to 50km
(32,000 to 164,000 feet) above Earth's surface helps filter out
damaging ultraviolet solar radiation. This ozone layer is being
decimated by CFC compounds used in refrigerators and coolant
systems. After negotiation of an international treaty, the
Montreal Protocol, CFC production was sharply limited beginning
in 1987 and phased out completely by 1996, and a study by the
American Geophysical Union shows the rate of stratospheric ozone
destruction slowing.
Ozone Generators are ineffective in controlling indoor air
pollution, because scientific evidence shows that at
concentrations that do not exceed public health standards, ozone
has little potential to remove indoor air contaminants, though
it still has the longterm potential to cause lung irritation.
Vendors claim that ozone will render almost every chemical
contaminant harmless through a chemical reaction whose only
by-products are carbon dioxide, oxygen and water. This is false
advertising for several reasons. First, it takes months to years
for ozone to react with many of the chemicals commonly found in
indoor air (Boeniger, 1995); so for all practical purposes, this
is useless. Also, ozone generators will not remove carbon
monoxide (Salls, 1927; Shaughnessy et al., 1994) or formaldehyde
(Esswein and Boeniger, 1994).
Secondly, in many cases where the reaction between the
pollutants and ozone does occur readily, the by-products are as
harmful or irritating as the original pollutants (Weschler et
al., 1992a, 1992b, 1996; Zhang and Lioy, 1994).
For instance, a laboratory experiment was conducted which mixed
ozone with chemicals from new carpet. Ozone did reduce many of
the chemicals, including those which can produce "new carpet"
odor. However, the reaction produced a variety of aldehydes, and
the total concentration of organic chemicals in the air actually
increased (Weschler, et. al., 1992b). Levels of irritating
formic acid also rise (Zhang and Lioy, 1994).
Some of the byproducts of ozone reaction are themselves reactive
and go on to produce further irritating and corrosive
by-products (Weschler and Shields, 1996, 1997a, 1997b). Ozone
producing devices turn an indoor environment into a seething
chemical flask.
Third, ozone by itself does not remove airborne particles such
as pollen and housedust. However, some ozone generators are
manufactured with an "ion generator" or "ionizer" in the same
unit to disperse negatively (and/or positively) charged ions
into the air. These ions attach to particles in the air giving
them a negative (or positive) charge so that the particles may
attach to nearby surfaces such as walls or furniture, creating
an undesirable grimy layer; or attach to one another and settle
out of the air. In recent experiments, ionizers proved
ineffective in removing dust, tobacco smoke, pollen or fungal
spores compared to either high efficiency particle filters or
electrostatic precipitators. (Shaughnessy et al., 1994; Pierce,
et al., 1996).
Even at concentrations that greatly exceed public health
standards, ozone is ineffective at cleaning the air. And
unfortunately, there is evidence to suggest that in some
circumstances ozone generating devices exceed tolerable output
limits. Due to the varying brands and models of these machines,
and the different room sizes in which they are eventually used,
there can be great variation in the eventual concentration of
ozone in the air.
In a study by Shaughnessy and Oatman (1991), a large ozone
generator recommended by the manufacturer for spaces "up to
3,000 square feet," was placed in a 350 square foot room and run
at a high setting. The ozone in the room quickly reached
hazardous levels of 0.50 to 0.80 ppm, 5-10 times higher than
public health limits.
In a 1995 EPA study, several different ozone generators were
tested in a home environment, in rooms of various sizes, with
doors alternately opened and closed, and with the central
ventilation system fan alternately turned on and off. The
results showed that some ozone generators, when run at maximum
settings in a sealed room, frequently produced hazardous
concentrations of 0.20 - 0.30 ppm. When the units were run at
lesser settings, with interior doors opened, concentrations
generally remained within public health standards.
Due to this wide variation in output and concentration, it is
impossible for consumers to know how much ozone is actually in
the air they are breathing; in many ordinary circumstances,
ozone generators can produce toxic levels. At least one
manufacturer is selling machines equipped with ozone sensors
that turn the machine on and off in response to ambient ozone
levels, in order to maintain levels of this entirely undesirable
gas within a"safe" range. The EPA is currently conducting tests
to evaluating the reliability of these sensors.