3B Lumin CPAP Cleaner – Ozone Free UV CPAP Mask and Accessory Sanitizer and Disinfectant
Maintain your respiration equipment with this 3B Lumin CPAP Cleaner. It requires really no maintenance with out a filters to replace and a protracted-lasting UVC mild bulb this is rated to without problems out survive the life of your device. It is recommended which you use this CPAP cleaning system two times weekly for your hose. It includes no harmful ozone. After using this 3B Lumin CPAP Cleaner, your device can be used without delay, and not using a residue to wipe off or waiting duration required. It kills ninety nine percentage of bacteria, because it is based at the identical excessive-powered germicidal UVC mild utilized in working rooms and surgical centers global to kill dangerous micro organism, viruses, fungus and mildew. This ozone-unfastened CPAP purifier disinfects in only five minutes.
Featuring a one-contact operation and automatic shut-off, it chimes and lighting as much as assist you to recognize whilst the cleaning cycle is entire. It is designed for CPAP machines, however it is useful for whatever, from electronics to listening to aids, mobile telephones, toothbrushes or maybe kid’s toys.3B Lumin CPAP Cleaner, Ozone-Free UV CPAP Mask and Accessory Sanitizer and Disinfectant:The 3B Lumin can disinfect any object that suits inside the drawerQuickly sanitize your CPAP masks, hose and water chamber in minutesAlso use to disinfect your toothbrush, electronics, listening to aids, mobile phones or even kid’s toysCPAP cleaning gadget kills ninety nine% of bacteria, viruses, fungus and moldCPAP may be used at once after disinfection; no residue to wipe off or waiting period required
3B or 3-B may refer to:
- Third baseman
- Triple (baseball)
- 3B Computers, a range of computers produced by AT&T during the 1980s
- 3B Junior, a department of the Japanese entertainment company Stardust Promotion
- 3B Lab, a Japanese popular music group
- Three Bs, a designation for three well-known classical composers
- 3B, a very soft grade of pencil lead
3B may refer to:
- SOS
Accessory may refer to:
- Accessory (legal term), a person who assists a criminal
A cleaner, cleanser or cleaning operative is a type of industrial or domestic worker who is tasked with cleaning a space. A janitor (US and Canada), also known as a custodian, porter or caretaker, is a person who cleans and might also carry out maintenance and security duties. A similar position, but usually with more managerial duties and not including cleaning, is occupied by building superintendents in the United States and Canada and by site managers in schools in the United Kingdom.
According to the Cambridge English dictionary a "cleaner" is "a person whose job is to clean houses, offices, public places, etc.:"; the Collins dictionary states that: "A cleaner is someone who is employed to clean the rooms and furniture inside a building." However, a cleaner does not always have to be employed and perform work for pay, such as in the case of volunteer work or community service. "Cleaner" may also refer to cleaning agents e.g. oven cleaner, or devices used for cleaning, e.g. vacuum cleaner.
Cleaning operatives may specialize in cleaning particular things or places, such as window cleaners, housekeepers, janitors, crime scene cleaners and so on. Cleaning operatives often work when the people who otherwise occupy the space are not around. They may clean offices at night or houses during the workday.
A disinfectant is a chemical substance or compound used to inactivate or destroy microorganisms on inert surfaces. Disinfection does not necessarily kill all microorganisms, especially resistant bacterial spores; it is less effective than sterilization, which is an extreme physical or chemical process that kills all types of life. Disinfectants are generally distinguished from other antimicrobial agents such as antibiotics, which destroy microorganisms within the body, and antiseptics, which destroy microorganisms on living tissue. Disinfectants are also different from biocides—the latter are intended to destroy all forms of life, not just microorganisms. Disinfectants work by destroying the cell wall of microbes or interfering with their metabolism. It is also a form of decontamination, and can be defined as the process whereby physical or chemical methods are used to reduce the amount of pathogenic microorganisms on a surface.
Disinfectants can also be used to destroy microorganisms on the skin and mucous membrane, as in the medical dictionary historically the word simply meant that it destroys microbes.
Sanitizers are substances that simultaneously clean and disinfect. Disinfectants kill more germs than sanitizers. Disinfectants are frequently used in hospitals, dental surgeries, kitchens, and bathrooms to kill infectious organisms. Sanitizers are mild compared to disinfectants and are used majorly to clean things that are in human contact whereas disinfectants are concentrated and are used to clean surfaces like floors and building premises.
Bacterial endospores are most resistant to disinfectants, but some fungi, viruses and bacteria also possess some resistance.
In wastewater treatment, a disinfection step with chlorine, ultra-violet (UV) radiation or ozonation can be included as tertiary treatment to remove pathogens from wastewater, for example if it is to be discharged to a river or the sea where there body contact immersion recreations is practiced (Europe) or reused to irrigate golf courses (US). An alternative term used in the sanitation sector for disinfection of waste streams, sewage sludge or fecal sludge is sanitisation or sanitization.
Lumin may refer to the following:
- Changan Lumin, an electric city car
- Lumin Tsukiboshi, the VTuber singer alias of Diana Garnet
Lumin is also a transliteration of multiple Chinese given names. Notable people with these names include:
- He Lumin (born 1981), Chinese taekwondo practitioner
- Wang Lumin (born 1990), Chinese Greco-Roman wrestler
- Zhou Lumin (born 1956), Chinese volleyball player
A mask is an object normally worn on the face, typically for protection, disguise, performance, or entertainment, and often employed for rituals and rites. Masks have been used since antiquity for both ceremonial and practical purposes, as well as in the performing arts and for entertainment. They are usually worn on the face, although they may also be positioned for effect elsewhere on the wearer's body.
In art history, especially sculpture, "mask" is the term for a face without a body that is not modelled in the round (which would make it a "head"), but for example appears in low relief.
Ozone () (or trioxygen) is an inorganic molecule with the chemical formula O
3. It is a pale blue gas with a distinctively pungent smell. It is an allotrope of oxygen that is much less stable than the diatomic allotrope O
2, breaking down in the lower atmosphere to O
2 (dioxygen). Ozone is formed from dioxygen by the action of ultraviolet (UV) light and electrical discharges within the Earth's atmosphere. It is present in very low concentrations throughout the atmosphere, with its highest concentration high in the ozone layer of the stratosphere, which absorbs most of the Sun's ultraviolet (UV) radiation.
Ozone's odor is reminiscent of chlorine, and detectable by many people at concentrations of as little as 0.1 ppm in air. Ozone's O3 structure was determined in 1865. The molecule was later proven to have a bent structure and to be weakly diamagnetic. In standard conditions, ozone is a pale blue gas that condenses at cryogenic temperatures to a dark blue liquid and finally a violet-black solid. Ozone's instability with regard to more common dioxygen is such that both concentrated gas and liquid ozone may decompose explosively at elevated temperatures, physical shock, or fast warming to the boiling point. It is therefore used commercially only in low concentrations.
Ozone is a powerful oxidant (far more so than dioxygen) and has many industrial and consumer applications related to oxidation. This same high oxidizing potential, however, causes ozone to damage mucous and respiratory tissues in animals, and also tissues in plants, above concentrations of about 0.1 ppm. While this makes ozone a potent respiratory hazard and pollutant near ground level, a higher concentration in the ozone layer (from two to eight ppm) is beneficial, preventing damaging UV light from reaching the Earth's surface.
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