The Best of 2011

Posted by Joel Leusink on December 31, 2011 under Ozone News | Read the First Comment

The Ozone Journal had a great 2011.  We continue to get more traffic and more readers.  As we near the end of the year we spend time looking back at the year.  Our most popular post was our April Fools post.  Yes, sorry to burst the bubble of you youth seeking beer drinkers, this was a hoax…

Most popular post of 2011

Study Finds Consuming Ozonated Beer Reverses Aging Process

Researchers nearing the conclusion of a five-year study on human aging announced Friday that they may have found a cure. In fact, a scientist involved with the study, who spoke on condition of anonymity, claims that early results seem to show that consuming certain brands of beer treated with ozone may actually reverse the aging process altogether.

MORE HERE

The 2nd most popular post was most likely a little more helpful to some of you ozone novices:

2nd most popular post of 2011

How to Measure Output of your Ozone Generator

We are commonly asked how to measure output or verify that an Ozone Generator produces the amount of ozone the manufacture claims. This tech sheet will cover how to measure the output of your high concentration Ozone Generator.

hour (g/hr), also known as ozone output. The ozone measurement instrument will read percent by weight (%), or grams per meter cubed (g/m3), also known as ozone concentration

MORE HERE

The end of another great year

Posted by Joel Leusink on December 30, 2011 under Ozone News | Read the First Comment

This evening marks the last work day of another great year.  2011 was an exciting year here at Ozone Solutions.  We made new friends, solved new problems, and encountered new adventures.  Here are a few of our highlights:

  • We sold turn-key ozone systems in the USA, Canada, Mexico, Venezuela, Ireland, Nigeria, Philippines and, Ghana along with a few I am sure I forgot
  • We hired 5 new full time employees
  • Purchased the land next door for future building expansion
  • 3 employees had new babies!
  • 1 employee got married (technically he will get married tomorrow, congratulations Daniel!)
  • Sales increased over 2010 giving another great boost in sales volume
  • We advised and coached 2 Lego League teams to district victory, watch for their success at state competition in 2012!
We have enjoyed serving our customers, and working with our vendors.  We thank all our customers and vendors for another great, successful year in the ozone industry.

 

Christmas Clean-Up

Posted by Joel Leusink on December 27, 2011 under Ozone Products | Read the First Comment

Christmas is over!  It was a great weekend of praising the Lord for the birth of his Son.  We ate too much food, got too many gifts, and spent time with loved ones.  Now, it’s back to work for the daily grind.  Of course, some of you may be cleaning up the house after a weekend of family and fun.  This is where Ozone Solutions may be able to offer a hand.

Did uncle John (you know, the one that smokes) make your couch smell like an ash tray?  Did Mom burn the beans on the stove?  Did your sisters kids (the ones in diapers) bring an unwelcome stench to the bathroom?

If you answered YES to any of these questions, we can help!  We rent small air purifier ozone generators to use in your home to remove odor quickly, and efficiently.

How to remove odor with an ozone generator

home ozone generator

Call us today, or check out our website for information!

Merry Christmas from Ozone Solutions!

Posted by markO3 on December 25, 2011 under Ozone News | Read the First Comment

Merry Christmas

 

As we near the end of another year, we would like to sincerely thank our customers for their business over the last 12 months and wish you all a very Merry Christmas and God’s Blessings for the year to come!

 

Sincerely,

The Ozone Solutions Team

Last minute Christmas Ideas

Posted by Joel Leusink on December 23, 2011 under Food Industry | Be the First to Comment

It’s almost Christmas. Did you buy all your presents? Maybe it’s too late for last minute gift ideas, however, you can use this idea next year.
fridgezone
A refrigerator ozone generator makes a great give for anyone with a refrigerator. This little generator operates off 4 D cell batteries and will provide enough ozone in your fridge to keep mold and bacteria from growing. This will keep food fresh and your fridge smelling pretty!

Strawberries in a normal fridge, and a fridge with ozone for 7-days.

Learn more about ozone and food storage HERE

Wishing you and your family a very Merry Christmas.  The Ozone Solutions team will be leaving now for the weekend.  We will return in full force next week Tuesday.

FIRST Lego League skit – showcasing Ozone

Posted by Joel Leusink on December 20, 2011 under Ozone News | Read the First Comment

Recently the FIRST Lego League from Le-Mars Iowa competed and finished well enough to qualify for the state competition in Ames, IA, in January 2012.  If you remember recently we posted a news article about this.  Watch the video below to view their award winning skit.

Ozone for bacterial reduction

Posted by Joel Leusink on December 16, 2011 under Ozone food | Be the First to Comment

Researchers Find New Use for Ozone

This is an older article, but worth the read.  To read the full article go HERE
Contact:
Ann Green 919/515-9070
posted Tuesday March 26, 2002
Scientists at the North Carolina State University Seafood Laboratory have found a new use for
ozone — enhancing the freshness of seafood.
In a study supported by the North Carolina Fishery Resource Grant Program (FRG), scientists 
found that ozone reduces the population of common spoilage bacteria in seafood processing 
facilities. FRG is funded by the North Carolina General Assembly and administered by North 
Carolina Sea Grant. The researchers worked with Peter Mairs of Hanover Sea Products in 
Wilmington.
“We found that treating raw fish as well as processing equipment with ozone greatly reduced the
number of bacteria that can potentially spoil seafood,” says Barry Nash, North Carolina Sea Grant
seafood technology and marketing specialist.
Researchers demonstrated the potential effectiveness of ozone as a broad-use, sanitizing agent
in a seafood production facility, says Nash. “This is important because bacteria are everywhere in
the environment,” he adds. “However, the use of ozone could greatly reduce the number of
spoilage bacteria in a seafood plant and help maintain the low levels of spoilage bacteria over
time in air, water and on processing equipment.”
To read the full article go HERE

        
        
                
        
        

Ozone used to Disinfect Hospital Rooms

Posted by Joel Leusink on December 14, 2011 under Ozone News | 2 Comments to Read

New way found to fend off hospital infections

Read full article HERE

Researchers in Canada say their new disinfection system may change the way hospital rooms, and perhaps hotel rooms, worldwide are cleaned.

Dr. Dick Zoutman, chief of staff at Quinte Health Care, and Dr. Michael Shannon of Medizone International at laboratories in Innovation Park, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, said the new disinfection technology also killed bed bugs.

The new technology involves pumping a mixture of Medizone-specific ozone and hydrogen peroxide gas into a room to sterilize everything — including floors, walls, drapes, mattresses, chairs and other surfaces. It is far more effective in killing bacteria than wiping down a room, Zoutman said.

Read more: http://www.upi.com/Health_News/2011/12/12/New-way-found-to-fend-off-hospital-infections/UPI-94161323748255/#ixzz1gVyoQ46D

Ozone kills bacteria

Learn more about how ozone kills bacteria HERE

Solar Powered Ozone Provides Clean Sewage on a Budget

Posted by Joel Leusink on December 12, 2011 under Ozone News | Read the First Comment

The cleanest sewage water in Arizona

Read entire Article on the NWRA website HERE

The city of Cottonwood could be drinking its reclaimed wastewater in 15 or 20 years, said Dan Lueder, the city’s head of development.

Actually, he nearly crowed this point.

“It looks like this is going to be the future of water re-use in Arizona,” Lueder said.

Cottonwood got into the drinking-water-production business in 2005, and it just happened to be sitting on a tax for big public projects that had accrued over about 20 years.

So Cottonwood plans to build an $8 million, solar-powered plant capable of breaking apart many trace synthetic compounds by blasting them with ozone and hydrogen peroxide.

The facility will likely have higher energy needs, but they’ll be met mostly or entirely by the sun.

 

But in Cottonwood, the water will next be sent into a winding system where it gets blasted with hydrogen peroxide and ozone, something called “advanced oxidation” treatment.

Ken Knickerbocker is engineering that part, and it will be capable of reducing chains of organic compounds.

“It will attack them and essentially break them down,” he said, without the chemical byproducts that now result from some disinfectants, like chlorine.

Read entire Article on the NWRA website HERE

Ozone Units of Measure, what do they all mean?

Posted by Joel Leusink on December 9, 2011 under Ozone News | 2 Comments to Read

ppm, ppb, g/m3, mg/l, and many others.  What do these all mean?  And what do they have to do with ozone?  Why do scientific papers have to be so confusing?  Let me try to help, keep reading.ppm, mg/l, lb/day, units of measure

ppm, mg/l, lb/day, units of measure

ppm = Parts per Million – Is a concentration measurement.  This would indicate how many parts of the gas in question (ozone in our case) there are in every 1 million parts of total gas.  For example, if we state there is 1 ppm ozone, that means for every 1 million parts of gas, 1 of these is ozone.  The tricky thing with ppm is that we can be measuring the “parts”  by volume, or weight.  Sometimes you may see this as ppmv, indicating parts per million by volume.   This is the most common ozone measurement.  ppm is used to measure ozone in air and ozone dissolved into water.

ppb = Parts per Billion – This is to indicate the same thing as ppm, only change the million to a billion.  This moves a decimal p


oint 3 places.  for example 0.1 ppm = 100 ppb.

ozone formulas

mg/l – Milligrams of ozone per Liter – Is a concentration measurement.  This indicates how many milligrams of ozone there are in one liter of total volume.  mg/l can be used to indicate the concentration of ozone in gas or liquid.

1 mg/l of ozone = 1 ppm of ozone in water.  Due to the density of air this is no longer true and 1 ppm of ozone = 2140 mg/l.  This is a common term used to measure the amount of ozone dissolved into water.

ug/ml – Microgram per millileter - Is a concentration measurement.  This indicates how manymicrograms of ozone there are i

n one milliliter of total volume.  mg/l can be used to indicate the concentration of ozone in gas or liquid.

1 ug/ml = 1 mg/l – these terms are equal, no conversion is necessary

ozone conversions


g/m3  = Grams of ozone per Cubic Meter – Is a concentration measurement.  This indicates how many grams of ozone there are in one cubic meter of total volume.  This can indicate volume of a gas or liquid.  g/m3 is most commonly used to measure the concentration of ozone in a gas stream.

1 g/m3 = 1 mg/l = 1 ppm of ozone in water

1 g/m3 = 467 ppm of ozone in air

% by weight (Percent by weight) – is a concentration measurement.  This indicates the percentage (%) of ozone within a given gas stream.  This is a very common method to illustrate the concentration of ozone from an ozone generator.  This is more complicated than g/m3 as the weight of gas changes if it is air, or oxygen gas that the ozone gas is mixed with.

1% Ozone = 12.8 g/m3 Ozone in air

1% Ozone = 14.3 g/m3 Ozone in oxygen

g/hr (gm/hr) – grams of ozone per hourIs a measurement of ozone production.  This is the most common method of measuring the output of an ozone generator.  We can measure the concentration of ozone in g/m3, then when we calculate for flow rate with a measurement like LPM (liters per minute) we can determine how many grams of ozone are produced in one hour of time.

mg/hr – milligrams of ozone per hour – This indicates the same thing as g/hr only on a smaller scale.  Smaller ozone generators may be rated in mg/hr.

1 g/hr of ozone = 1,000 mg/hr of ozone production.

lb/day – Pounds per Day – Is a measurement of ozone production.  This is a common measurement of ozone production of much larger ozone generators.  This is a common term to use for large ozone generators, and is commonly used in some industries within the ozone world.

1 lb/day of ozone = 18.89 g/hr ozone production.

ozone conversions

Ozone production can also be displayed in kg/hr, kg/day, or many other measurement, these can all be simply converted for easier understanding for all parties.

There may be other units of measure used, however these are the most common.  Other units of measure can be converted to more common units of measure as needed.

If the work of calculating the output of an ozone generator, or the dosage rate of ozone into water is too much for you, please, use our online calculator to help you out.

 

Should you have questions that are not answered here please contact our application engineers for help.