Abstract

The potential for alcoholic vapors emitted by common sanitizing treatments to deteriorate the (electrostatic) filtration performance of disposable respirator masks has been investigated. Reports in the literature and some standard test methods provide a confusing and ambiguous picture concerning the relevance of this effect. Four different types of exposure were investigated in this study to clarify the effect of alcoholic vapor emissions on respirator masks. These included exposure to saturated vapors, use of hand sanitizers, cleaning of table surfaces and sanitization of masks by spraying them with alcohol-containing solutions. Methods employed were designed to be as real-world oriented as possible while remaining reproducible. Filtration performance and deterioration effects on exposure to the different treatments were determined on three different types of certified commercial respirator masks—a P2 and two KN95 masks. This study provides substantial evidence that disposable respirator masks with an accepted performance rating are seriously compromised from an exposure to saturated alcoholic vapors, can tolerate a one-off spray treatment with an alcoholic solution and retain their attested protection under the influence of alcoholic vapors from the use of hand sanitizer or spray sanitizer. Considering the range of vastly different outcomes obtained from the four treatments investigated, it seems prudent to assess in each case the specific effects of alcoholic solution treatments and vapors on respirator masks before use.

Highlights

  • From early 2020, sanitizing treatments have fulfilled an essential role in suppressing the spread of infection during the COVID-19 pandemic [1]

  • Sanitizing is used in addition to other personal protective equipment (PPE) comprising gowns, face shields and face masks to protect people during essential activities ranging from working as a health care professional in hospitals to regularly visiting shops to purchase groceries

  • The specific issue we investigated was the potential for alcohol vapors from hand sanitizers or other sources to render disposable masks ineffective or insufficiently effective for the intended purpose, which would apply to most surgical masks and disposable respirator masks that are offered commercially

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Summary

Introduction

From early 2020, sanitizing treatments have fulfilled an essential role in suppressing the spread of infection during the COVID-19 pandemic [1]. Sanitizing is used in addition to other personal protective equipment (PPE) comprising gowns, face shields and face masks to protect people during essential activities ranging from working as a health care professional in hospitals to regularly visiting shops to purchase groceries. Ethanol is most commonly used for hand sanitizers in Australia because it is readily available, as well as isopropanol in some cases. Another important tool in combatting the spread of disease is the use of face masks [6,7,8,9]

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