Disinfecting and Sanitizing Carpet
OCTOBER 24, 2012
Those familiar with the Institute of Inspection, Cleaning
and Restoration Certification (IICRC) water damage and remediation standards
will quote portions of the standard that say if you have a "Level 3"
black water contamination, you can't clean the carpet and/or cushion. It must
be replaced.
In those cases, you often have sewage, bodily fluids or
infectious materials or bio-waste in or on the carpet; of course, the realistic
procedure is to remove the carpet and replace it.
Where this becomes less clear is when the spill or
contamination is small, such as less than one square foot in size and is not
extensive, or is primarily located on the surface of the carpet.
Can this be saturated with a disinfectant or sanitizer, for
the required dwell time, and then extracted? Would it then be considered
acceptable?
That's a question often debated by the experts and often a
reality faced on the job by cleaning professionals.
It's not always sewage
What about the homeowner who has children and pets and wants
to the have the carpet sanitized during cleaning?
What about an apartment, hotel or condo building manager who
has had a tenant that had pets and wants to remove pet odors and stains?
What about a day care center where multiple children play
and sleep on the carpet and occasionally vomit or have an accident involving
urine or feces?
What about a carpeted hospital or nursing home that smells
of urine, or the carpet on a locker room floor of a health club that smells
like dirty, stale socks? Is there a way to effectively and legally disinfect or
sanitize these areas?
Disinfect versus sanitize
Here's the reality: You can use a disinfectant product or
solution on carpet, but that won't — according to U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) definitions — allow you to legally claim on a product label or in
your advertising that you have or can disinfect carpet.
Depending on the carpet manufacturer, using a disinfectant
or sanitizing product may void any warranty in existence. Some disinfectant and
sanitizing products may leave a residue that can attract soil, and some
products affect the performance of mill-applied stain resistance properties.
Lastly, there is no realistic "on the job" way to
test, verify or validate that what you have done to disinfect or sanitize
carpeting has actually been effective. There are protocols to test the
effectiveness of a sanitizing chemical when used on carpet, but the tests are
expensive and done only in a lab.
What the experts say
Cliff Zlotnik, former owner of Unsmoke Systems, which
produced the Microban line of products that are now sold by Legend Brands, has
strong feelings about disinfection.
"I do not believe that a product will be approved by
the EPA to disinfect a carpet. My understanding is that the EPA's position is
that only hard surfaces can be disinfected," Zlotnik said. "I also
believe the EPA's current testing protocol for carpet sanitizers is
flawed."
Zlotnik added that there are a number of sanitizers on the
market that are approved for use on carpeting. "Most are quaternary
(quat)-based, but there are also phenolic-based products on the market."
Ann Kowalecki, the product manager for Legend Brands, said
this: "The most important thing is to read and follow the instructions on
the label. That will tell you how to use the product, its limitations and what
it can properly be used for."
Kowalecki said that this will include such things as whether
the carpet needs to be cleaned first, how to dilute the product, and if it
needs to be flushed after application.
"From the EPA's standpoint, you can't disinfect a
carpet. That terminology relates to hard surfaces, not carpeting,"
Kowalecki emphasized. "But you can, if you follow the label directions,
say that you will sanitize or decontaminate a carpet. From a practical
standpoint, it depends on how far gone the carpet is, what it's soiled with and
how much of it there is on the surface and in the backing of the carpet."
Patrick Moffett, president of Environmental Management and
Engineering Inc., said that disinfecting and sanitizing carpet are two
different things. "In clean and gray water losses, carpet is expected to
be able to be cleaned and restored with no appreciable increase in the
biological load of the carpet," he said. "If you look at chemical
manufacturer disinfectant claims, they are for hard surfaces and seldom for
fabrics."
How we clean and sanitize clothing is to use detergents and
proper rinsing, Moffett said. "Hot water must be 140 degrees Fahrenheit
and, in hospital settings, hot water must be above 160 degrees Fahrenheit. When
we get carpet adhesives above 120 degrees Fahrenheit, they tend to liquefy and
break apart." Using hot water is not practical in salvaging an entire
sewage-soaked carpet, he said.
Also, according to Moffett, some people are promoting
enzymes for disinfecting purposes. "They work to a degree, but I've not
seen a product manufacturer step up to the plate and guarantee that their
product killed 99.99 percent of coliform bacteria, viruses, mold and parasites
in carpeting."
Rick Hoverson of Advanced Vapor Technologies Inc. said that
disinfection and sanitization of carpet is difficult because of the mass and
irregularity of the surface. That's why he promotes his dry vapor system.
"With dry vapor, we can get a reduction in the number
of microorganisms present in a carpet and the process is quite effective
against odors, dust mites and their allergens, but we can't make claims or
guarantee disinfection or sanitization," Hoverson said. "Our tests
prove that repeated passes and extended exposure to dry vapor are more
effective than a single pass. We have found that dry vapor is more effective on
thin fabrics such as cubical curtains, than thick fabrics such as
carpeting."
Another issue cited by Hoverson is the fact that there are
no definitive or easy ways to test the effectiveness of the results of any
attempt at disinfection or sanitization of carpeting.
The botanical side
The latest advancements in botanical disinfecting technology
have made it possible for products to kill micro-organisms without endangering
human health, according to Sam DeAth, president of Benefect Corp. "The
technology continues to advance and in 2012 we will be seeing botanical carpet
sanitizers registered by the EPA — the first of their kind."
DeAth said the market is quickly becoming educated on issues
regarding indoor air quality and unnecessary chemical toxicity. "Today, we
have a choice to use safer, botanical products while still achieving the same
results, even for carpet."
In the past, DeAth said, it was assumed that disinfectants
had to be toxic to humans to do their job. He's excited that the botanical
option has emerged as a viable solution. "While it's true that traditional
hard surface disinfectants will likely kill any organisms that they come into
contact with, antimicrobial products that are EPA registered as carpet
sanitizers are specifically formulated for penetrating into porous carpet materials
and to avoid binding with soils or the carpet fibers themselves, which is what
quats do. So they are still a better choice."
Keep it clean, healthy and safe
If you use products or processes to sanitize carpet, the
most important thing to remember is the health and well-being of yourself, your
workers and your customers.
Do what is best for everyone. Keep everything clean, healthy
and safe.
Bill Griffin is an industry consultant and trainer, and
the owner of Cleaning Consultant Services Inc. He is also president of ICAN, a
non-profit association comprised of industry professionals providing free
consultation services through Cleaning Management Institute (CMI). Comments and
questions about bidding and estimating are encouraged: (206) 849-0179;WGriffin@CleaningConsultants.com.
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