Aerospace giant Boeing tested two kinds of ionization technologies â like those widely adopted in schools hoping to combat covid â to determine how well each killed germs on surfaces and decided that neither was effective enough to install on its commercial planes.
Boeing noted that âair ionization has not shown significant disinfection effectiveness.â
Companies that make the air purifiers say they emit charged ions, or âactivated oxygen,â that are said to inactivate bacteria and viruses in the air. Boeing did not test the technologyâs effectiveness in the air, only on surfaces. It also used a âsurrogateâ for the virus that causes covid-19.
has been cited in a federal lawsuit filed by a Maryland consumer against Global Plasma Solutions, maker of the âneedlepoint bipolar ionizationâ technology that a Boeing spokesperson said its engineers tested.
The proposed class-action lawsuit says GPS makes âdeceptive, misleading, and falseâ claims about its products based on company-funded studies that are ânot applicable to real world conditions.â
A GPS spokesperson said the lawsuit is âbaseless and misleadingâ and that the company will aggressively defend against it. He added that Boeing âresearchers deemed the study âinconclusive.ââ
âPlaintiffâs Complaint throws the proverbial kitchen sink at GPS in the hopes that something might stick,â the air purifier company says in filed May 24 as part of its motion to dismiss the proposed class action. âBut it is devoid of any concrete, specific allegations plausibly alleging that GPS made even a single false or deceptive statement about its products.â
The plaintiffâs case cites that found that more than 2,000 U.S. schools had bought air-purifying technology, including ionizers. Many schools used federal funds to purchase the products. In April, a covid-19 commission task force from The Lancet, a leading medical journal, composed of top international health, education and air-quality experts, called various air-cleaning technologies â ionization, plasma and dry hydrogen peroxide â â.â
Boeing said in that with ionization there is âvery little external peer reviewed research in comparison to other traditional disinfection technologiesâ such as chemical, UV and thermal disinfection and , all of which it relies on to sanitize its planes.
The controversy is getting the attention of school officials from coast to coast. They include one California superintendent who cited the lawsuit and switched off that districtâs more than 400 GPS devices.
For worried parents and academic air-quality experts who regard industry-backed studies with skepticism, the Boeing report heightens their concerns.
âThis [study] is totally damning,â said Delphine Farmer, a Colorado State University associate professor who specializes in atmospheric and indoor chemistry who reviewed the Boeing report. âIt should just raise flags for absolutely everyone.â
âNo Reduction’ in Bacteria
GPS pointed to another study, one conducted in the weeks before Boeing began its study in September, by a third-party lab. It completed of â powered by GPS technology â that another aviation company now markets to clean the air and surfaces in planes.
That study looked at the effect of the ionizers on the virus that causes covid-19 when used on aluminum, a type of plastic called Kydex and leather. The test it was conducted in a sealed, 20-by-8-foot chamber, with airflow speeds of 2,133 feet per minute â or about 24 mph. At the end of 30 minutes, âthe overall average decrease in active virusâ was more than 99%.
âGiven the specific environment this was tested in, the quality of the materials, and the method in which the virus was dispersed, it is safe to say that the bipolar ionization system used in this experiment has the ability to deactivate SARS-CoV-2 with the given ion counts,â the Aug. 7 report from the third-party lab says.
The following month, Boeing of GPS devices and another kind of ionization technology.
The Boeing study cites a GPS that says its device killed 99.68% of E. coli bacteria in one test in 15 minutes. GPS records show the test was done on bacteria suspended . The Boeing engineers used the companyâs technology to try to kill E. coli on surfaces in a lab but found âno observable reduction in viabilityâ after an hour.
The Boeing study notes it âwas unable to replicate supplier results in terms of antimicrobial effectiveness.â
GPS cautioned that the Boeing tests examined disinfection of surfaces, not the air: âWhile GPS products do have the ability to help reduce pathogens in air and on surfaces, GPS products are not chemical surface disinfectants.â
Yet surface tests comprise half of the test results the company lists on its ââ webpage, a GPS spokesperson confirmed.
Boeing researchers found another lab result they could not replicate: While the GPS white paper a 96.24% reduction in Staphylococcus aureus in 30 minutes, Boeing engineers found âno reductionsâ in the bacteria in an hourlong test.
Boeing found minimal or no reduction on surfaces in four other pathogens it tested with GPS ionizers for an hour in a Huntsville, Alabama, lab.
Notably, Boeingâs tests in Huntsville detected no hazardous ozone gas from the GPS unit, the . The âcorona dischargeâ ionization technology from another vendor that Boeing also studied did emit ozone at levels that âexceeded regulatory standards.â
A University of Arizona lab test described in the Boeing study found that the GPS device showed a 66.7% inactivation of a common cold coronavirus on a surface after an hour of exposure at up to 62,000 negative ions per cubic centimeter. That ion level is far higher than the amount of ions company leaders have said the devices tend to deliver to a typical room. Those levels have ranged from to and 30,000 ions per cubic centimeter when an HVAC system is running, according to records and statements made by .
In during a Berkeley Unified School District meeting in California, a physicist with executives said a level of more than 60,000 ions per cubic centimeter âhas been shown to be not healthy.â
GPS noted that Boeing deemed the 66.7% effectiveness rate in killing the common cold virus “statistically significant.” A GPS spokesperson said the result validates needlepoint bipolar ionizationâs âeffectiveness against certain pathogens.â In its report, Boeing called the test results âinconclusiveâ due to âlack of experimental confirmation.â
A GPS spokesperson also highlighted a passage in the Boeing reportâs conclusion that said: âThere remains significant interest in air ionization due to lack of byproduct production, minimal risk to human health, minimum risk to airplane materials and systems, and the potential for persistent disinfection of air and surfaces under specific flow conditions.â
The Boeing study concluded in January. In April, GPS of additional tests it funded at a third-party lab showing its technology âis highly effective in neutralizing the SARS-CoV-2 pathogen.â
Boeing engineers said their study highlights the need for those in the ionization business to standardize the evaluation of the technology âto allow comparison to other proven methods of disinfection.â
Ripple Effects of the Boeing Study
On May 7, law firms representing a man who spent over $750 on a GPS air cleaner in Texas filed the âfraudulent concealmentâ in U.S. District Court in Delaware.
The lawsuit claims that the defendantâs âmisrepresentations and false statements were woven into an extensive and long-term advertising campaign … accelerating during the COVID-19 pandemic.â
âPeople are being victimized by these companies for profit,â said Mickey Mills, a Houston attorney for the plaintiff. âPeople are scared because of covid, and they capitalize on it.â
In filing a motion to dismiss the case, GPS told the court the lawsuit was an âattempt to distort the facts and assert baseless claims, doing grave damage to GPSâs business in the process.â
The GPS court document also says the disclaimers on its website âmake it unreasonable for any consumers to believe that the efficacy demonstrated in GPS studies will necessarily be the same for their particular application.â
It asserts that most of the GPS statements identified in the plaintiffâs lawsuit â such as âsafe to useâ and âcleaner airâ â amount to ânon-actionable pufferyâ as they are âvague generalities and statements of opinion.â
The lawsuit spurred a Newark, California, school district to turn off its GPS devices, according to a from Superintendent Mark Triplett to district families. The district spent nearly $360,000 on the devices, an April shows.
The roughly 5,500-student district bought GPS units for every school HVAC system, Triplett said in a March school in which he noted the technology âarguably is much better than any filter.â By May, in the memo the district had become aware of the lawsuit âalleging the misrepresentationâ of the devices and would continue to monitor the situation.
A company spokesperson noted GPS appreciates Newarkâs concerns and has reached out to share additional data and answer questions, as well as extended âan offer to conduct onsite testing to verify the safety of this technology and the added benefits.â
Megan McMillen, vice president of the Newark Teachers Association and a special education preschool teacher, said it was disheartening to know the cash-strapped district in the Bay Area spent so much on the devices instead of other safety measures or services to mitigate learning loss after the chaotic pandemic year.
âFor such a big chunk of that [money] going to something potentially ineffective … is really frustrating,â she said.