4.4 Article

Bacteriostasis and cleaning effect of trace ozone replacing personal care products

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY
Volume 44, Issue 17, Pages 2617-2630

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09593330.2022.2036818

Keywords

Trace ozone; personal care products (PCPs); skin microbiome; inactivation; cleaning performance

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This study evaluated the applicability of trace ozone in terms of microbial inactivation, cleaning performance, safety for hair, and emission reduction. The results showed that trace ozone can efficiently inactivate bacteria, fungi, and viruses, and has no significant damage to hair. By replacing personal care products with trace ozone, the use of synthetic chemical products can be reduced, and carbon emissions from oil extraction can be countered.
Ozone is widely used to inactivate bacteria, fungi, and viruses. In recent years, the treatment of itchy skin diseases (eczema and atopic dermatitis) using trace ozone has also received attention. However, the feasibility of using trace ozone to replace personal care products (PCPs) has rarely been analyzed. In this study, the applicability of trace ozone was evaluated in terms of its efficiency for microbial inactivation in three types of skin microbiomes, cleaning performance on simulated human hair and epidermis, safety for simulated human hair, and contribution to emission reduction. The results revealed that at a 10:1 ratio of ozonated water to bacterial suspension, the inactivation ratios of Malassezia, C. albicans, and S. epidermidis reached 99.63%, 83.47%, and 100%, respectively. In addition, the cleaning performance of an ozone solution (0.4 mg/L) for simulated human skin contaminated with carbon black and sebum could reach 95.89% and 95.63%, respectively, with 5 min of washing. The average scores were 0.40 and 0.37 after 5 min and 10 min of ozone treatments, respectively, indicating that trace ozone does not significantly damage simulated human hair. Results also revealed that the total emissions of COD, TP, and TN would be reduced by 1.29x10(6), 3.55x10(3), and 3.63x10(3) mg/ (household center dot year), respectively, if PCPs are replaced by trace ozone. In short, our findings indicate that trace ozone is a potential alternative to PCPs. By replacing PCPs with trace ozone, the use of synthetic chemical products can be reduced and carbon emissions from oil extraction can be countered.

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