News and Events
- Highly Cited: UCD researchers named amongst 2024’s most influential
- ESTEEM Graduate Programme
- Scientists’ next-generation space materials blast off for tests on ISS
- Competition! Celebrating John Stewart Bell’s Legacy
- Minister O’Donovan announces €26million for 40 research projects
- Engineering Class of 1958
- Professor Anding Zhu elected IEEE MTT-S President
- Bridges and Bytes – Launching the Student Voice on AI and Assessment
- European Research Council Funds Cutting-Edge Irish Research into Microplastics and Traumatic Brain Injury
- Professor Finola O'Kane appointed as a Senior Fellow at Dumbarton Oaks
- SBFE research fellow Xiaohui Lin receives the MSCA DOROTHY COFUND award
- Upskill with UCD’s engineering micro-credentials
- Minister O’Donovan announces funding boost for early career researchers
- Recent Lab visit by UCD Engineering & Architecture to Sheffield University Diamond Centre
- UCD Stormwater Runoff Research featured in Nicola Haines Team
- Madeleine Lowery among UCD Researchers recognised in SFI Frontiers for the Future Awards
- UCD’s LaNua Medical Wins Big Ideas Award at Enterprise Ireland’s Start-Up Day 2024
- Robotics Competition
- Congratulations to All the Winners of this years NovaUCD Awards
- Irish National Doctoral Research Cohort on Floating Offshore Wind Dynamic Cables is formed
- UCD and Northeastern University extend and deepen long-standing partnership with five collaborative research projects
- EPA announces €14.3M in new research funding
- Arup Scholarship Awards 2024
- UCD names new Vice-President for Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
- Project promoting safe staffing in the healthcare system wins UCD Research Impact Competition
- VOICE Project Launches to Shape Tomorrow's Sustainability
- Archives
- 2023 News Archive
- 2022 News Archive
- 2021 News Archive
- 2020 News Archive
- Professor Da-Wen Sun Publishes Paper in Internationally Most Prestigious Journal (Impact Factor: 42.846)
- Assistant Professor Samantha Martin-McAuliffe new editor-in-chief of Architectural Histories.
- The Irish Laboratory Awards 2020
- Major development for Irish space sector as UCD launches Space Centre
- Introducing the winner of the Irish Research Council Impact Award
- University College Dublin Spin-Out Shortlisted for Irish Times Innovation Awards 2020
- UCD team wins prestigious ESB Inter-Colleges Challenge 2020
- University College Dublin Spin-out Wins Global Chemical Engineering Award
- UCD researchers named among world’s most influential
- Further Government Supported Places Announced
- Government Supported Places Announced
- NovoGrid Pilot Project Saves Over 300,000 kWh of Renewable Energy at Wexford Wind Farm
- Fourteen UCD research projects secure €10.2 million funding through SFI Frontiers for the Future Programme
- The Just Transition
- Nasrine Seraji joins UCD's School of APEP
- Two University College Dublin Spin-out Companies Shortlisted for the 2020 IChemE Global Awards
- Joyst Unveils a New Style of MIDI Music Controller and Launches a Kickstarter Campaign
- Celebrating this year's Women’s Economic Forum Award Winners
- Eight UCD projects awarded €1.5m to help respond to COVID-19 pandemic
- Revised Government public health guidelines impact on campus activities
- University College Dublin Spin-out Develops New Method to Generate Ozone Nanobubbles
- AERAP Virtual Conference
- Conferring Ceremony 2020
- Important information for incoming or continuing students of the UCD College of Engineering and Architecture
- Empowering the Full Potential of Image Data
- Digital Animation for Educators
- Eco-Health: Ecosystem Benefits of Greenspace for Health
- UCD First Year Engineering Students win the Grand Finals of the Engineers Without Borders-UK Engineering for People Design Challenge
- Intel’s Colm Farrell named as Adjunct Professor at UCD
- UCD Engineers Receive 2019 NovaUCD Innovation Awards
- PlasmaBound Seals €1.1 million Investment Round
- UCD Formula Student Wins the 2020 NovaUCD Student Enterprise Competition
- Fulbright Irish Awards: Nine UCD scholars selected for coveted transatlantic prize
- Two New COVID-19 Research and Innovation Projects at University College Dublin Receive Science Foundation Ireland Funding
- Eleven Early Stage Ventures Commence NovaUCD’s 2020 Start-up Programme for Student Entrepreneurs
- UCD Staff reflect on COVID-19’s Transformation of Education
- A Milestone — UCD Professor's H-Index (Web of Science) Reaches 100
- Airflow video shows how easily coronavirus can be spread by coughing
- UCD researcher co-leads €4.5m project to use cold plasma to treat Orthopaedic infection
- UCD Researchers Discover New Method to Generate Substantial Volumes of Nanobubbles in Water
- UCD volunteers use 3D printing to produce PPE for front-line COVID-19 medical staff
- UCD engineer leads Irish efforts in global race to build ventilators
- Minor Harbours of Ireland
- Forbes ‘30 under 30 Europe' recognises two UCD graduates
- UCD-based Inventors Help Create Ingenious Solutions to Everyday Problems for Extraordinary People on Big Life Fix
- Arup UCD Engineering scholarships 2019
- Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara Receive the 2020 Pritzker Architecture Prize
- President Higgins honours SFI President of Ireland Future Research Leaders
- UCD heat-resistant coating to allow ESA’s Solar Orbiter to get up close and personal with the Sun
- Intel and UCD Renew Collaboration on Talent, Research and Education
- Bottles or Cans – An Energy Analysis of Recycling that Prompts More Questions than Answers
- 2019 News Archive
- 2018 News Archive
- 2017 News Archive
- 2016 News Archive
- Building the State
- A Centenary Celebration
University College Dublin Spin-out Develops New Method to Generate Ozone Nanobubbles
Friday, 11 September, 2020
Delivered as an aerosol spray ozone nanobubbles can more effectively disinfect indoor spaces
(opens in a new window)AquaB (AquaB Nanobubble Innovations Ltd), a University College Dublin (UCD) spin-out company, today announced that it has developed a novel method of generating ozone nanobubbles in water with commercial disinfectant applications.
Ozone (O3) is an inorganic gas molecule which has been used for over 100 years as a safe and effective disinfection agent in many industrial and consumer settings. It is a powerful disinfectant as it oxidises directly and penetrates a pathogen’s cell wall, thereby destroying the pathogen. However, in water, the half-life of ozone is approximately 30 minutes, limiting its disinfecting effectiveness.
Nanobubbles, tiny gas bubbles on the nanometre (nm) scale, (a human hair is ca. 60,000 – 100,000 nm wide), are thermodynamically metastable for many months or even longer due to their enhanced gas-transfer properties.
Given these properties with AquaB’s new method of generating ozone nanobubbles, ozone lifetimes in the nanobubble-aqueous form are substantially increased over and above traditional ozone solvation in water by an order of magnitude. This overcomes the limitations of using conventionally solvated ozone as a disinfectant agent.
Ozone nanobubbles, which can be delivered as an aerosol droplet spray, have therefore the potential to be used as a more effective and efficient spraying method to ozonate, sterilise or disinfect, indoor spaces. These ozone nanobubbles can also be added to bulk liquid water and used to eliminate bacteria and viruses in wastewater.
AquaB was established earlier this year to commercialise a new energy-efficient method to generate and release substantial volumes of metastable, nano-scale gas bubbles in water.
This method is based on research carried out by Professor Niall English and Dr Mohammad Reza Ghaani at UCD’s School of Chemical and Bioprocess Engineering, who are the co-founders of AquaB.
Professor Niall English, CEO, AquaB, said, “In our novel method of generating ozone nanobubbles, following direct ozone-gas generation, we apply our patented, energy-efficient nanobubble-generation approach in water via electric-field exposure, resulting in a combination of ozone (O3) and oxygen (O2) nanobubbles in solution.”
“These ozone nanobubbles serve as ‘batteries’ - or reservoirs - to replenish continually solvated-ozone levels for hours, and their gradual diminution and depletion over these much longer timescales, compared to ozone in the gas phase or traditionally solvated state, affords this “nano-bubbly” water very potent steriliser or disinfectant properties - even more effective than chlorine.”
He added, “Delivering the ozone nanobubbles as an aerosol spray indoors, the ozone nanobubble water droplets adhere, by gravity and direct-spray contact to surfaces, such as chairs and desks, more effectively, thus ozonating or disinfecting the spaces and killing bacteria and viruses, including potentially SARS-CoV-2, for more prolonged periods of time in between spraying campaigns.”
Dr Mohammad Reza Ghaani, CTO, AquaB said, “Our plan now is to specifically test the ozone nanobubble technology, as water droplets in an aerosol spray, as an effective disinfectant against SARS-CoV-2. This will hopefully help to liberate indoor spaces, and potentially crowded outdoor spaces, during COVID-19 for gatherings, whether professional, social or sporting.”
He added, “The company is also in discussions with a large-industry partner to help accelerate the commercialisation of the technology, and we also intend to liaise with public bodies.”
AquaB is a client company of NovaUCD, the Centre for New Ventures and Entrepreneurs, and is working closely with UCD’s knowledge transfer team to accelerate the commercialisation of AquaB’s nanobubble technology.
Professor English concluded, “We would like to thank Enterprise Ireland for their ongoing support to date which includes technology development funding and support with market development activities.”