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Stopping the next pandemic could be as simple as switching on a light bulb
In January 2024, I wrote a big piece on a relatively new, and very promising, approach to fighting respiratory diseases like Covid, tuberculosis, and flus. It’s called “far-UVC,” a type of ultraviolet light, at wavelengths of roughly 200 to 235 nanometers, that can kill the vast majority of airborne pathogens it targets, without damaging human skin or eyes the way longer-wavelength UV does.The potential here is massive. Imagine being able to place a few lamps in key rooms where disease transmission is common — like schools and daycares, hospitals, retail stores, and offices — and kill off the vast majority of diseases being spread through the air. The benefits, both in immediate public health and the ability to head off the spread of pandemics like Covid in their early days, would be massive. The lamps can kill over 99.9 percent of Covid viruses in the air — and would be similarly effective against new outbreaks that spread through the air.So why don’t we have far-UVC in operation right now? There have been at least two major factors holding the tech back to date, but in the year and a half since my piece came out, we’ve gotten some promising information on both of them.More, cheaper, lampsRight now, if you want to get 222 nm ultraviolet light (the standard for far-UVC), you need what’s called an excimer lamp. These work the way fluorescent light bulbs do: by putting an electric charge into a tube containing a gas, forcing the gas to emit light. You can use different gases and interacting elements to get different wavelengths of light; in far-UVC, the usual combination is krypton and chlorine gas.This approach has a few problems. Krypton-chloride lamps produce mostly 222 nm light, but not exclusively. Excimer lamps have to include filters to avoid emitting other wavelengths; some filters work better than others, and a malfunctioning filter could be a safety risk by letting more dangerous wavelengths through. The krypton-chloride tubes also don’t last forever and have to be periodically replaced, raising the price of far-UVC disinfection.The dream, then, has been “solid-state” lamps. These would forgo the gas-in-a-tube approach in favor of mechanisms that emit only a specific wavelength of light. The most prominent approach to date has been LEDs, like those used in computer/TV screens and in modern light bulbs. LEDs get less efficient the shorter the wavelength you use, which poses a challenge. That said, we did eventually get LEDS that emit blue light, which is on the short end of the visible light spectrum, and startups like NS Nanotech have come a long way in making LEDs for far-UVC.The big news this week, though, is in another approach: secondary harmonics. Basically, you can design crystals that, when lasers are shot through them, double the frequency of the laser light, which halves the wavelength. So if you shoot a 444 nm blue laser into an appropriate crystal, you get exactly 222 nm far-UVC light back.Emerging from stealth this month, Uviquity, a Raleigh-based startup staffed by a group of veteran photonics engineers and backed with $6.6 million in seed money, told me they have gotten this process working in their lab. Blue lasers are an old technology at this point (they’re where the name Blu-ray comes from), and have a mature supply chain, meaning building them is relatively cheap and easy.The crystal that Uviquity uses is made from aluminum nitrate, which is not exactly hard to come by — “aluminum is plentiful and nitrogen is plentiful,” as CEO Scott Burroughs told me. “It doesn’t require a whole new technology or infrastructure in order to build these devices,” Burroughs continued. “Once we realized that, we also realized just how well positioned this would be in order to scale up very rapidly.”It’s hard to overstate the importance of this kind of far-UVC emitter, once it goes to market. It could enable far-UVC lamps to see cost reductions mirroring the drastic drops seen in LEDs and other chips over the years. Making far-UVC disinfection exponentially cheaper could start to make the idea mainstream and speed adoption.Something in the airA big part of the appeal of far-UVC is that, unlike higher-wavelength UV — which can cause sunburns, cataracts, and worse — far-UVC is safe for humans’ eyes and skins. But its effect on air quality has been less clear. As I explained in my piece:When far-UV light hits oxygen molecules, it breaks some of them to form O3 — better known as ozone. Ozone itself is hazardous, and responsible for about 365,000 deaths a year worldwide. Ozone also interacts with volatile organic compounds (VOCs), small carbon-based molecules suspended in the air … These compounds interact with the ozone to create particulate matter. And particulates in the air — smog, basically — can also kill.That sounds bad, but the basic chemistry leaves a lot of important questions unanswered. How much ozone and particulate pollution do far-UVC lamps actually make in practice? How hard is it for ventilation to clear that up? Are the levels of additional exposure big enough to be a major concern?There’s still a lot we don’t know here. As a new report from the research group Blueprint Biosecurity explains, a lot of the uncertainty about far-UVC-related ozone is really uncertainty about why ozone is bad for you. If ozone’s effect on mortality is because of ozone itself, then ventilating rooms indoors could be harmful; there’s more ozone outside than inside, and better ventilation would just pull it indoors. But if ozone is harmful mostly because it creates other secondary pollutants, then ventilation is a good idea. We don’t know, and that makes understanding the best way to use technologies like far-UVC and ventilation very difficult.That said, some new research is making me tentatively more optimistic that the ozone effects of far-UVC are not concerningly large. One recent paper studied an office where either one far-UVC lamp (as recommended by the manufacturer) or four (way in excess of recommendations) were placed. The single lamp didn’t do anything to ozone or particulate levels in the room. The four lamps did. The conclusion, then, is that if used in moderation, far-UVC lamps could disinfect without ruining indoor air.Another paper did find modestly higher ozone levels with a single far-UVC lamp — but it found that if the lamp is placed on the ceiling, it both minimizes exposure to ozone by humans, and maximizes the lamp’s effectiveness at disinfecting the air.These are still early days for far-UVC, both in the engineering challenge of designing cost-effective lamps, and in the epidemiological challenge of understanding its effects on the air. What we need more than anything is additional research.But I am modestly more confident than I was last year that we’re heading toward a world where these lamps are ubiquitous. Potential pandemic threats, like bird flu, or even a new dangerous respiratory virus engineered in a lab with the help of AI, would face a formidable new foe that can kill them in midair. With luck, in 10 or 20 years, childhood flus, tubercular infections, and even pandemic viruses could be withering away due to the efforts of this new weapon.You’ve read 1 article in the last monthHere at Vox, we're unwavering in our commitment to covering the issues that matter most to you — threats to democracy, immigration, reproductive rights, the environment, and the rising polarization across this country.Our mission is to provide clear, accessible journalism that empowers you to stay informed and engaged in shaping our world. By becoming a Vox Member, you directly strengthen our ability to deliver in-depth, independent reporting that drives meaningful change.We rely on readers like you — join us.Swati SharmaVox Editor-in-ChiefSee More:
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