A global survey in December 2020 revealed a preference for surface and air
disinfection in automobiles which may have been accelerated by the COVID-19
pandemic. The observed trend towards healthy cars may remain well after the
current pandemic. Additionally, new safety features like CO2 gas
sensors, antimicrobial fabrics, and enhanced air purifiers have emerged. While
automobile air purifiers trap contaminants using cartridge filters, they are not
particularly efficient at removing viral particles and create large pressure
drops, which must be compensated with larger fans, increasing power requirements
and noise in the vehicle cabin. A HVAC system with integrated UVC-LEDs can
inactivating viruses, bacteria, and mold. UVC LEDs are desirable because unlike
mercury lamps, they do not pose electrical, glass, and chemical hazards. With
the recent improvements in UVC LED lifetime and power, UVC LEDs are becoming a
better alternative, as highlighted by recent upsurge of successful in air
disinfection studies against SARS-CoV-2 and H1N1. In this paper, the KM model is
applied to a vehicle, initial testing on 25 L/s shows half log reduction of E.
coli, then a model of a disinfection chamber that could fit a vehicle HVAC is
created, and finally a full size mock vehicle is disinfected using Phi6 as a
surrogate. It’s estimated from this that 90% of SARS-CoV-2 could be eliminated
in 5 minutes. This demonstrates the feasibility of UVC LEDs for aerosol
disinfection in vehicles.