Skip to main content

CO₂ room air monitoring reduces the risk of infection

Studies confirm that CO2 is an indicator for the aerosol concentration. Increased air exchange keeps the CO2 and aerosol pollution in the room low and thus reduces the risk of corona infection. Plug the sensor into the socket and off you go with more security in the office, school or day-care centre: AFRISO CO2 tell you when it is time for ventilation by means of an easily understandable LED traffic light. If the sensor is integrated into the smart home system, ventilation systems can also be controlled or the heating system can be adjusted during ventilation.

Aerosols are ultra-fine airborne liquid particles and droplet (<5 µm). They are released when you breathe and speak – sneezing and coughing create even more droplets. Depending on their size, the particles stay in the air for a certain period of time and sink to the ground at different rates. While virus transmissions by aerosols in outdoor areas are relatively rare, the likelihood of exposure to droplets and aerosols is significantly increased indoors within a radius of 1 to 2 m from an infected person. Staying in poorly ventilated rooms can increase the likelihood of transmission even over long distances, especially if an infectious person emits many particles. Due to the distribution of aerosols in the room air, maintaining the minimum distance or setting up partition walls is often no longer sufficient: A major problem especially for schools, kindergartens, care facilities or companies with open-plan offices and meeting rooms. Learning, playing and working together in closed rooms over a longer period of time becomes a risk.