PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

The properties of hot household hygroscopic materials and their potential use for non-medical facemask decontamination.

  • Marie-Line Andreola,
  • Fréderic Becquart,
  • Wahbi Jomaa,
  • Paul O Verhoeven,
  • Gérard Baldacchino,
  • Simon Hemour,
  • D-Mask consortium

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255148
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 9
p. e0255148

Abstract

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The widespread use of facemasks throughout the population is recommended by the WHO to reduce transmission of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. As some regions of the world are facing mask shortages, reuse may be necessary. However, used masks are considered as a potential hazard that may spread and transmit disease if they are not decontaminated correctly and systematically before reuse. As a result, the inappropriate decontamination practices that are commonly witnessed in the general public are challenging management of the epidemic at a large scale. To achieve public acceptance and implementation, decontamination procedures need to be low-cost and simple. We propose the use of hot hygroscopic materials to decontaminate non-medical facemasks in household settings. We report on the inactivation of a viral load on a facial mask exposed to hot hygroscopic materials for 15 minutes. As opposed to recent academic studies whereby decontamination is achieved by maintaining heat and humidity above a given value, a more flexible procedure is proposed here using a slow decaying pattern, which is both effective and easier to implement, suggesting straightforward public deployment and hence reliable implementation by the population.