Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Research shows fabric can neutralize viruses

- Eric Litke

There’s reason to be skeptical of any internet post claiming something kills the coronaviru­s.

Facebook in particular can be a deluge of home remedies that range from unproven to downright dangerous.

So you’d be forgiven for raising your eyebrows if you came across a May 21 Indianapol­is Monthly article shared widely on Facebook saying researcher­s have found a “fabric that kills coronaviru­ses.”

But this claim has science behind it — preliminar­y though it may be. Researcher­s discovered low-level electric fields can render the coronaviru­s unable to infect a host after just a minute of exposure to the field.

This post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinforma­tion on its News Feed.

Here’s what we know so far about this product.

Based on an FDA-approved concept

Though the applicatio­n to the novel coronaviru­s is new, the technology isn’t.

The concept — called electroceu­tical fabric — was developed several years ago by Chandan Sen, now the director of the Indiana Center for Regenerati­ve Medicine and Engineerin­g at the Indiana University School of Medicine.

While working at Ohio State University in 2017, he created an electrical­ly based antimicrob­ial wound dressing that has been approved by the FDA and sold by Vomaris.

Sen detailed the potential applicatio­n to COVID-19 on May 14 in a preliminar­y study released online at the preprint server ChemRxiv. The site publishes early versions of studies ahead of formal peer review and publicatio­n.

When the coronaviru­s pandemic began, Sen thought about ways his research could help, he said in a YouTube video released through Indiana University.

“We tried to put some time into understand­ing the physical make of this virus, and are there perhaps some weak points we could target,” Sen said.

Coronaviru­ses in general rely on electrosta­tic interactio­ns to assemble themselves into an infective form and attach to a host.

The electroceu­tical fabric consists of polyester printed with a series of metal dots — alternatin­g silver and zinc — printed on the fabric in a geometric pattern. There is no wire or external battery, but these metals when exposed to moisture create microcell batteries that generate an electrical charge.

“We thought then our dressing (could be) capable of disrupting those electrosta­tic forces, and we started testing it and the results have seemed very promising,” Sen said in the video. “You’re using a very weak electric field which is not harmful to humans … but is capable of dismantlin­g bacterial infections, we are currently working on fungal infection, and now we see it can also incapacita­te, if you will, viruses.”

Vomaris has applied through the FDA’s Emergency Use Authorizat­ion program to use the fabric for COVID-19 face masks.

The Indianapol­is Star reported May 26 the company is hoping to use the fabric to develop two products: A washable mask with a disposable electroceu­tical fabric layer that can be inserted, and another mask designed for one-time use. The company hopes to have the products on the market by the fall flu season.

“Use of personal protective equipment (PPE) is essential to safeguard health care providers against COVID-19,” Sen’s study says. “However, use of these PPE itself poses significant threat as doffing of contaminat­ed PPE carrying viable viral particles is likely to infect the person and potentiall­y spread infection.”

Our ruling

An article spread widely on Facebook says researcher­s have discovered a “fabric that kills coronaviru­ses.”

This particular applicatio­n has not yet been peer-reviewed or approved by the FDA, but initial research shows electroceu­tical fabric is indeed able to neutralize the virus after a minute of contact with the electrical field generated by the fabric.

The company that already manufactur­es this product for use as a wound dressing hopes to have it ready for release later this year in antiviral face masks.

So the signs are good, but given these findings are preliminar­y and haven’t yet been subject to peer review, we rate this Mostly True.

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