Using antimicrobial door hardware like antimicrobial door handles, antimicrobial door knobs, door pulls and thumb turns which are most often touched by people every minute can slow down and stop the spread of germs, and perfectly protect us from germs. Have you ever used suchlike door hardware? Let’s know more about it, and try to share it with our family and friends, if you also support this technology.
What is Antimicrobial Technology?
Antimicrobial - adjective [an-ti-mī-ˈkrō-bē-əl]
Destroying or inhibiting the growth and reproduction of microorganisms, especially pathogenic microorganisms.
Pathogenic Microorganisms are harmful bacteria, mold, and mildew.
Unlike disinfectants, which provide a limited residual activity once the treated surface dries, integrated antimicrobial technology works to continuously minimize the presence of microbes throughout the entire lifecycle of a product.
Antimicrobial Additive
Benefits of Antimicrobial Technology
- 99.9% of people young & old find touching a toilet door handle terrifying
- 30% of students do not wash their hands after visiting the school toilets, 80% of school infections are spread by touch, 66% of students do not use soap in the school toilets
- Simple for your site team to install - simply screw fixes to existing doors
- Wide application for classroom doors, toilet doors, corridor doors, internal fire doors, public institution doors, commercial doors, office doors.
Bacteria types that HUACI Antimicrobial door hardware is effective against
Makes a Product Cleaner In-between Cleanings
How does Antimicrobial Technology work?
HUACI antimicrobial technology works at a cellular level to continually disrupt the growth and reproduction of microorganisms.
- Protein Damage: antimicrobial agents attack the proteins of a microbe, causing failure of essential functions.
- Cell Disruption: antimicrobial agents damage the membrane of a microbe, leading to the loss of critical nutrients.
- Oxidative Damage: antimicrobial agents cause increased oxygen levels, leading to significant damage to the internal systems of a microbe.
- DNA Disruption: antimicrobial agents interfere with the genetics of a microbe, ultimately preventing their growth and reproduction.