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The properties of hot household hygroscopic materials and their potential use for non-medical facemask decontamination

PLoS ONE 2021 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Marie‐Line Andréola, Fréderic Becquart, Wahbi Jomaa, Paul O. Verhoeven Paul O. Verhoeven Paul O. Verhoeven Gérard Baldacchino, Simon Hemour, Paul O. Verhoeven

Summary

This study explored using hot hygroscopic household materials (like rice or salt) to decontaminate reusable face masks during the COVID-19 pandemic. The method offers a low-cost, accessible alternative for households facing mask shortages.

The widespread use of facemasks throughout the population is recommended by the WHO to reduce transmission of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. As some regions of the world are facing mask shortages, reuse may be necessary. However, used masks are considered as a potential hazard that may spread and transmit disease if they are not decontaminated correctly and systematically before reuse. As a result, the inappropriate decontamination practices that are commonly witnessed in the general public are challenging management of the epidemic at a large scale. To achieve public acceptance and implementation, decontamination procedures need to be low-cost and simple. We propose the use of hot hygroscopic materials to decontaminate non-medical facemasks in household settings. We report on the inactivation of a viral load on a facial mask exposed to hot hygroscopic materials for 15 minutes. As opposed to recent academic studies whereby decontamination is achieved by maintaining heat and humidity above a given value, a more flexible procedure is proposed here using a slow decaying pattern, which is both effective and easier to implement, suggesting straightforward public deployment and hence reliable implementation by the population.

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