The principle of ultraviolet sterilizer: Ultraviolet light is a type of light wave that is invisible to the naked eye and exists on the outer side of the ultraviolet ray end of the spectrum, hence it is called ultraviolet light. The ultraviolet system comes from one of the electromagnetic waves emitted by the sun. Ultraviolet radiation is usually divided into four categories according to wavelength. It is a special form of material operation, which is a flow of particles that are not connected. Each ultraviolet photon with a wavelength of 253.7nm has an energy of 4.9eV. When ultraviolet radiation is irradiated on microorganisms, energy transfer and accumulation occur, resulting in the inactivation of microorganisms and achieving the purpose of disinfection. When bacteria and viruses absorb doses exceeding 3600-65000 uW/c ㎡, they have destructive power on the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA) of bacteria and viruses, which can cause them to lose their viability and reproductive ability, thereby eliminating bacteria and viruses and achieving disinfection and sterilization effects. On the one hand, ultraviolet radiation can cause nucleic acid mutations, hinder their replication, transcriptional blockade, and protein synthesis; On the other hand, the generation of free radicals can cause photoionization, leading to cell death.
UV sterilizerThe principle:
Ultraviolet radiation is a type of light wave that is invisible to the naked eye and exists on the outer side of the ultraviolet ray end of the spectrum, hence it is called ultraviolet radiation. The ultraviolet system comes from one of the electromagnetic waves emitted by the sun, and ultraviolet radiation is usually classified into four categories according to wavelength, as follows
It is a special form of material operation, a flow of particles that are not connected. Each ultraviolet photon with a wavelength of 253.7nm has an energy of 4.9eV. When ultraviolet radiation is irradiated on microorganisms, energy transfer and accumulation occur, resulting in the inactivation of microorganisms and achieving the purpose of disinfection. When bacteria and viruses absorb doses exceeding 3600-65000 uW/c ㎡, they have destructive power on the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA) of bacteria and viruses, which can cause them to lose their viability and reproductive ability, thereby eliminating bacteria and viruses and achieving disinfection and sterilization effects. On the one hand, ultraviolet radiation can cause nucleic acid mutations, hinder their replication, transcriptional blockade, and protein synthesis; On the other hand, the generation of free radicals can cause photoionization, leading to cell death.