Indoor air can potentially be more dangerous and up to 100x more polluted than outdoor air -- teeming with numerous microorganisms such as viruses, bacteria, fungal spores, and pollen. Poor air ventilation systems are one of the main causes of low air quality.
Some research studies have shown that in just seven hours, a single bacterium can multiply into upwards of 2,000,000 bacteria. As the polluted air is stuck within a space by the air conditioning system, fresh air is unable to be cycled in, and is why we can quickly become ill staying indoors as the pathogenic microbes invade our bodies.
Using the airflow of existing air conditioning systems as a delivery method, our ionizer forms millions or positively and negatively charged ions -- just like nature. Find out below what this simple change can do for your indoor air quality.
As negatively and positively charged ions are unstable and seek to re-stabilize, they become attracted towards other atoms or molecules to exchange electrons and stabilize. Thus, these bipolar ions find and react with pollutant molecules - effectively neutralizing them and making indoor air safer.