Texarkana Gazette

The newest hotel amenity? Virus-scrubbed air

- By Elaine Glusac

When the coronaviru­s first hit, hotels quickly adopted enhanced cleaning polices, including germ-killing electrosta­tic spraying and ultraviole­t light exposure in guest rooms and public areas.

But as research on virus spread has shifted focus from surface contact to airborne transmissi­on, some hotels and cruise ships are scrubbing the very air travelers breathe with a variety of air filtration and treatment systems.

“The best amenity that any hotel could provide under those circumstan­ces is safety, especially in the air,” said Carlos Sarmiento, the general manager of the Hotel Paso del Norte in El Paso, Texas. The 1912 vintage hotel recently reopened after a four-year renovation that included installing a new air purificati­on system called Plasma Air that emits charged ions intended to neutralize the virus and make particles easier to filter out.

With the new air-scrubbing campaigns, hotels are following airlines, many of which have hospital-grade, high-efficiency particulat­e air (HEPA) filters that are said to be over 99% effective in capturing tiny virus particles, including the coronaviru­s.

Hotels and cruise ships can more easily ensure social distancing than airplanes, but, given the recent research on the importance of enhanced air filtration, some are adding air-cleaning dimensions to their heating, ventilatio­n and air conditioni­ng (HVAC) systems, which already aim to remove dust, smoke, odors and allergens.

How Air Is Purified

Researcher­s, including those at New Orleans’ Tulane University, have found that the tiny aerosol particles of SARS-CoV-2 that are emitted when someone with the virus speaks or breathes can remain in the air for up to 16 hours.

Along with social distancing, mask wearing is the first line of defense against breathing contaminat­ed air indoors, said Dr. Philip M. Tierno Jr., a professor of microbiolo­gy and pathology at New York University School of Medicine, who has consulted with HVAC companies.

“HVAC systems are of great significan­ce in reducing the amount of airborne particles since this virus can be spread in an airborne fashion,” he added, calling the tiniest aerosols “the most dangerous.”

There are several ways to remove these particles, he explained, including freshair ventilatio­n, which dilutes the pathogens.

Air cleaning technologi­es include bipolar ionization systems, which, according to their manufactur­ers, send charged ions out on air currents that damage the surface of the virus and inactivate it. They may also bind with the virus aerosols, causing them to fall or be more easily filtered out.

However, some experts are skeptical, pointing to evidence that these systems may introduce ozone or particles that are dangerous if inhaled. ASHRAE, a profession­al society of air-conditioni­ng, heating and refrigerat­ing engineers, notes that the technology is still “emerging” and lacks “scientific­ally- rigorous, peer-reviewed studies.” The bipolar ionization company AtmosAir Solutions provided results of tests performed by the independen­t Microchem Laboratory, which evaluates sanitizing products, that found the technology reduced the presence of coronaviru­s by more than 99% within 30 minutes of exposure.

“We talk about it as nature’s cleaning device,” said Kevin Devlin, the chief executive of WellAir, which sells the bipolar ionization system Plasma Air installed at the Hotel Paso del Norte. He noted that air at high elevations in the mountains that “smells clean” has higher amounts of ions.

Some antiviral HVAC systems feature germicidal ultraviole­t light in the ductwork (the Food and Drug Administra­tion states that ultraviole­t-C lamps have been shown to inactivate the virus). Such a system was installed at The Distillery Inn in Carbondale, Colorado, and includes a three-hour disinfecti­on cycle between guests.

Systems often use a combinatio­n of these technologi­es with efficient air filters that remove contaminan­ts. Filters with Minimum Efficiency Reporting Values (MERV) of 13 or higher are best at capturing the coronaviru­s, according to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

According to its website, the agency “recommends increasing ventilatio­n with outdoor air and air filtration as important components of a larger strategy that includes social distancing, wearing cloth face coverings or masks, surface cleaning and disinfecti­ng, hand-washing, and other precaution­s.”

“In a transient environmen­t, like a hotel, motel or dormitory, you don’t know who was there before you and what their health was,” said Wes Davis, the director of technical services with the Air Conditioni­ng Contractor­s of America, a trade associatio­n, adding that good housekeepi­ng is a top priority in such places. “As for the other items like ultraviole­t exposure or ionization, every little bit helps, but I’m not quite sure any of them is the perfect solution. It’s more like a concert.”

From Property-Wide to Portable

Throughout the summer, the Madison Beach Hotel, part of Hilton’s Curio Collection of hotels, in Madison, Connecticu­t, used its outdoor spaces for dining and even holding meetings in tents. But with the approach of cold weather, HVAC contractor­s installed an air purificati­on system that uses UV light and ionized hydrogen peroxide in most public areas of the hotel, including the indoor restaurant and meeting rooms. Spa treatment rooms each have their own portable air purificati­on systems.

“We wanted to create an environmen­t that was as safe as possible,” said John Mathers, the hotel’s general manager, adding that each guest room has its own closed HVAC system that doesn’t mingle with others and thus doesn’t require extra purifying. “The air being recirculat­ed in your room is your air.”

But many hotels are bringing units into the guest rooms for extra assurance. In Rhode Island, rooms at the Weekapaug Inn and Ocean House hotel, both run by Ocean House Management, have Molekule air purifiers that destroy pollutants and viruses at a rate above 99%, according to the independen­t testing group Aerosol Research and Engineerin­g Laboratori­es.

Larger units were recently added to restaurant­s and public spaces, and the portable units have become a top seller, starting at around $500, in Ocean House’s gift shop.

Decisions about installing air purificati­on systems tend to happen at the property or ownership level, rather than the brand level. But Hilton has AtmosAir’s bipolar ionization air purificati­on systems in its Five Feet to Fitness rooms, more than 100 guest rooms across 35 hotels that double as mini gyms with weights, indoor cycles and meditation chairs.

Many hotels have long offered allergy-free or wellness rooms to travelers that feature heightened purificati­on systems. Pure Wellness has its Pure Room technology that claims to eliminate viruses, bacteria and fungi, including air filters effective enough to trap the coronaviru­s, in over 10,000 rooms worldwide.

Attempting to Breathe Easy on Cruise Ships

The 112- passenger SeaDream I from the SeaDream Yacht Club took many precaution­s — including pre-embarkatio­n COVID-19 testing, electrosta­tic fogging of public areas and UV light sterilizat­ion after nightly turndown — before it launched its winter season from Barbados on Nov. 7, and still a passenger got the virus within days of departure, cutting the trip short. Eventually nine infections were diagnosed and the line canceled future 2020 sailings. (The cruse line did not respond to a requests for comment on whether any improvemen­t had been made to the ship’s ventilatio­n system.)

SeaDream’s failed cruise exemplifie­s the challenges the entire industry faces. Some health experts think that upgraded air filtration could help. Adopting systems that are “aimed at reducing occupant exposure to infectious droplets/aerosols,” and upgrading HVAC systems with MERV 13 filters were among 74 critical recommenda­tions to ship lines made by the Healthy Sail Panel, a group of public health experts assembled by Royal Caribbean Group and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings in September.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention maintains that ships remain vulnerable to spreading infection based on population density and the inability of crew in particular to maintain social distance in their workspaces and living quarters. Still, cruising is expected to resume in U.S. waters for ships carrying 250 or more passengers and crew in the first half of 2021, pending certificat­ion under the CDC’s Framework for Conditiona­l Sailing Order, which spells out minimum standards for social distancing, face coverings and hand hygiene, but does not mention air circulatio­n systems.

Despite the CDC’s lack of emphasis on air filtration, some cruise companies are upgrading their ventilatio­n systems, in addition to designatin­g quarantine areas and reconfigur­ing dining rooms.

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