This cleaning method uses a machine to create a fine mist of antiviral disinfectant, which disperses in the air and disinfects surfaces, eliminating viruses, bacteria, and harmful germs.
Hospitals, clinics, and other healthcare facilities use fogging to maintain sterile environments.
Offices, factories, and other workplaces use fogging to reduce the spread of viruses among employees.
Schools, gyms, shopping malls, and transportation hubs may use fogging as part of their routine cleaning protocols.
It can also be used in residential settings, especially after an illness outbreak or to maintain a high level of cleanliness.
Antiviral fogging is a disinfection method that involves using a specialised machine to create a fine mist or fog of antiviral disinfectant.
This fog is dispersed into the air and settles on surfaces, killing or inactivating viruses, bacteria, and other pathogens present in the environment.
Fogging is a highly effective disinfection method that ensures comprehensive coverage of all areas, including those that are challenging to reach or clean manually.
By dispersing disinfectant as a fine mist, fogging can access small crevices, tight spaces, and high-touch surfaces, providing a thorough sanitisation that standard cleaning methods may miss.
This approach helps ensure that every part of your facility is treated with disinfectant, enhancing overall hygiene and reducing the risk of contamination.
Fogging technology allows for the rapid disinfection of large areas, making it significantly more efficient than traditional manual cleaning methods.
This technique distributes disinfectant as a fine mist, covering surfaces thoroughly and evenly in a fraction of the time required for manual wiping. By reducing cleaning time while maintaining a high standard of sanitation, fogging is ideal for treating expansive spaces, high-traffic areas, and facilities that require frequent disinfection.
This efficiency makes it an invaluable solution for maintaining hygiene in environments where time and thoroughness are critical.
Fogging is an effective disinfection method that significantly reduces viral loads, enhancing safety in high-traffic areas or spaces where an infected person has been.
By dispersing a fine mist, it reaches all surfaces, including hard-to-clean areas, ensuring thorough sanitisation and lowering transmission risks in shared environments.
A fogging machine or device, often called a fogger, is used to generate a fine mist from a liquid disinfectant. The particles are tiny enough to stay suspended in the air for a while, allowing them to reach areas that might be difficult to clean manually.
The solution used in fogging is typically a powerful antiviral and antibacterial disinfectant. Common ingredients include quaternary ammonium compounds, hydrogen peroxide, or chlorine dioxide. These substances are effective in killing a wide range of pathogens, including viruses like influenza, coronaviruses, and others.
The fogger is activated in the space that needs to be disinfected. The fog fills the air and lands on all exposed surfaces, including hard-to-reach areas such as corners, crevices, and behind objects.
As the fog settles, the disinfectant inactivates viruses and other pathogens on surfaces. Depending on the disinfectant used, the process can be quick, with surfaces becoming safe to touch within minutes to an hour after fogging.
After fogging, it's recommended to ventilate the area to clear the air of any lingering mist. Once the area is safe, it can be reoccupied.
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