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On your IG-133A products page, it mentions Less than .02 parts per million ozone close to the emitter. Would it be accurate to say it produces ozone only in trace amounts “?

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On your IG-133A products page, it mentions Less than .02 parts per million ozone close to the emitter. Would it be accurate to say it produces ozone only in trace amounts “?

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That would be somewhat accurate. But that statement implies that people are unavoidably going to be breathing small amounts of ozone. That is not the case. Technically speaking, most corona-discharge type high-density ionizers emit a tiny amount of ozone as a by-product of generating a high level of negative ions. However, the ozone output is actually much less than .02 parts ppm, even within an inch or so of the ion emitter. Furthermore, the ozone levels even in a very small room would almost certainly never exceed safe limits, even if the ionizer is left running 24 hours a day. Ozone is an unstable, short-lived gas, and does not normally build up like you would think, unless you’re generating enormous quantities of it on purpose. Air circulation here is about as minimal as it gets. We have an ionizer in every room, and we don’t have ozone. And some of the ionizers we’ve run were much more powerful than the ones we sell online. Not to mention that we also run an actual ozone generator

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