Waterloo Region Record

Self-cleaning keyboard rids itself of germs

Vioguard, armed with FDA approval, is ready to bring its solution to market

- Rachel Lerman

The keyboards we touch multiple times every day are crawling with germs.

But Bothell tech company Vio-guard has found a way to eliminate them, and, armed with FDA approval, the company is ready to bring its solution to market.

Vioguard started in 2008 after a group of Microsoft employees bought research the Redmond company had conducted on the use of ultraviole­t light to eradicate the bacteria on keyboards.

After many rounds of developmen­t, Vioguard is preparing to start selling its self-cleaning keyboard. It features a small box, just slightly larger than the keyboard.

A press of a button sends the keyboard into the case. Inside, the keyboard gets hit with a kind of ultraviole­t light, called UV-C. In 90 seconds, 99.99 per cent of all bacteria and pathogens are eliminated.

The keyboard can also sense when it hasn’t been in use for a few minutes and will automatica­lly enter the case to start the disinfecti­ng process.

The company is starting to sell the keyboard and case, with a combined cost of about $750 US, to health-care organizati­ons, said CEO Dave Schultz.

It made the most sense to reach out to hospitals first, Schultz said, because of their critical need to prevent the spread of infection.

Eventually, the company hopes to expand marketing of its keyboards to offices and homes.

Vioguard raised $5 million US earlier this year from Imagen Capital Partners to manufactur­e the latest version of the keyboard technology and to expand its team. Vioguard now has 13 employees, and it expects to grow to about 20 by the end of the year.

Eventually, Schultz said, the technology will be used beyond keyboards: for shoes, pens, clipboards — really anything that carries bacteria.

“All of those problems can be helped with the basic technology of shining UV light on microbes,” he said.

 ?? VIOGUARD, TNS ?? Seen in a health-care setting, the Vioguard keyboard can slide, with the push of a button, into its case, where ultraviole­t rays kill germs.
VIOGUARD, TNS Seen in a health-care setting, the Vioguard keyboard can slide, with the push of a button, into its case, where ultraviole­t rays kill germs.

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