IN-LINE TREATMENT OF LIQUIDS AND GASES BY LIGHT IRRADIATION
Embodiments of the invention are directed to a liquid disinfection device. The device may include a pipeline to hold flowing liquid to be treated with light radiation where the pipeline having walls made of light-transparent material and surrounded by air, a fluid inlet and a fluid outlet and one or more windows adapted for the transmission of light into the pipeline. The device may further include one or more light sources positioned externally to the pipeline to generate light to be transmitted through the window into the flowing liquid within the pipeline and a reflector to reflect light generated by the one or more light sources through respective windows into the flowing liquid within the pipeline, wherein the reflected light strikes the walls of the pipeline at angles of incidence greater than a critical angle for total internal reflection to enable the total internal reflection.
This application is a Continuation Application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/566,992 having a filing date of Jan. 4, 2007, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,683,344 which is a National Phase Application of PCT International Application No. PCT/IL2004/000717 International Filing Date Aug. 4, 2004 entitled “In-Line Treatment Of Liquids And Gases By Light Irradiation”, which in turn claims priority from Israel Patent Application No. 157229, filed on Aug. 4, 2003, all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThis invention relates to in-line irradiation of fluids, and more specifically to the treatment of liquids (especially water) and gases (especially air) on their way from a source to a destination by light radiation (especially in the UV range). Further more the present invention relates to disinfection of solid surfaces related to the in-line treatment of the liquids or gases.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONWater is a multi purpose life resource. It uses for drinking, cleaning, irrigation, swimming, and for very wide variety of industrial utilities including in the food industry. Due to the vitality of water for life, population development significantly influenced from the availability of water, and thus efforts are always made to increase water availability and to reduce the expenses involved in their production. This is because the existence of rich water sources not always assures their adaptation to the intended use, due to the presence of other substances in it. In many of water uses there exist standards and health requirements as for the quality of water with respect to the concentration of contaminants in it, which are no doubt essential, but normally increase the production costs of water due to special treatments it should have in order to bringing it with conformity with such standards and requirements. The costs of water treatment is often such high, such that pure populations cannot withstand, thus abandon themselves to the dangers hiding in non treated water. Furthermore, costs of water treatment many time prevent water recycling, and thus even in places all over the world were water is not so much available or low priced, water is wasted in huge amounts after single use, since their recycling treatment costs higher.
Although in pure populations the costs of water production are critical to people lives, they are also of highly significance in well developed populations as well, from several aspects. This is because water treatment costs very much influence life level indexes, since water is involved in all life aspects either directly (i.e. in direct consumption such as drinking, washing, swimming) and indirectly (i.e. in indirect consumption such as industrial processes).
The present invention shall concentrate on disinfection and decontamination of water from health damaging biological and chemical substances.
When dealing with water disinfection, it should always be remembered that in order to maintain the aseptic conditions of disinfected water, it is required that all the solids and gasses that may become in contact with such water should be disinfected as well then maintained in an appropriate aseptic condition.
During the years several basic concepts of disinfection and decontamination of water have been developed, which compete on the global market with their advantages and disadvantages.
Many times, producers harness several disinfection concepts on one production line, wherein, for example, water reservoirs and conveyor belts are decontaminated using toxic chemicals (then washed very strictly to avoid chemical residuals from the end product), water pipes are decontaminated by delivering boiled water, end product bottles are disinfected using chemicals, and the water itself (as a product) may be irradiated by UV light for disinfection.
It is appreciated that a most significant factor in determining what treatment concept would be chosen for a decontamination treatment, is the cost involved. Probably, chemical disinfection process which involves the use of toxic substances which should then be cleaned off and removed, will not be chosen unless other concepts, e.g. heating, costs higher.
Another clean disinfection concept which involves no toxic substances is irradiating the disinfected medium by germicidal UV light. However, although many patents have been issued and many efforts are all the time made to provide UV disinfection system having industrial capacity that may address all sorts of production requirements and still offer reasonable prices either for establishment and for current maintenance, a great success in that field could not yet be observed.
One obstacle in the path of providing optimal UV disinfection devices is the cost of the optics. Optic systems which will allow for a reliable disinfection process needs to ensure that each and every portion of the disinfectant will receive appropriate amount of germicidal energy. Unfortunately, the either the basic costs and the maintenance costs of such optical systems are not small enough so as one may absolutely prefer the UV concept versus others.
One obstacle in the path of providing optimal UV disinfection devices is the cost of the UV light source itself, and of course its maintenance costs.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,454,937 to Horton et. al. and U.S. Pat. No. 5,200,156 to Wedekamp, are both directed to irradiating flowing fluids with UV light in a direction along the flowing path, in order to maximize the efficiency of the UV energy and to minimize the absorption of UV light by the walls of vessels or pipes which contain the irradiated fluid. For this purpose UV light sources are arranged according to said patents to emit maximum energy in a direction parallel to the axis of a pipe (or pipes) through which flows the fluid.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates to a reactor for the treatment of fluids with light radiation, comprising a tube or a vessel made of transparent material and surrounded by air, and having a fluid inlet, a fluid outlet, and at least one opening or window adapted for the transmission of light from an external light source into the tube.
According to various preferred embodiments of the present invention the tube or the vessel is made of quartz.
According to various preferred embodiments of the present invention the tube or the vessel is positioned inside a protective sleeve with an air gap in between.
According to various preferred embodiments of the present invention the window is provided with optical filter for avoiding light of unwanted wavelengths from entering the reactor.
According to various preferred embodiments of the present invention the reactor is further comprising light detectors in light communication with predetermined regions at an outer side of the tube or the vessel and in data communication with a controller of a disinfection system making use of the reactor.
According to additional embodiments of the present invention the reactor is further comprising at least one additional tube or vessel made of transparent material wherein the transparent tubes are of descending diameters and are positioned one inside another with gaps in between, about the same longitudinal axis, forming a multi core reactor.
According to other embodiments the reactor is further comprising at least one additional tube made of transparent material wherein the transparent tubes or vessels are of descending diameters and are positioned one inside another with gaps in between, about the same longitudinal axis, forming a multi core reactor.
According to various preferred embodiments the fluid outlet is formed as a filling nozzle in a liquid filling apparatus, or as a water launcher in a washing apparatus.
The present invention refers also to a disinfection device, comprising at least one reactor as defined by any of the previous claims, and at least one light radiation source aligned into the reactor.
The device according to the present invention may further comprise light detectors in light communication with predetermined regions of a transparent wall of a tube inside the reactor, and in data communication with a controller of the disinfection device.
The device of the present invention could be used in a domestic water supply system, and accordingly may further comprise a faucet adapted to be activated by a domestic user, in liquid communication with a fluid outlet of the reactor.
The device of the present invention could be used also in an air conditioning or circulating system, with its fluid inlet or outlet in air communication with at least one air blower or air pump.
According to various preferred embodiments the at least one light radiation source of the device of the present invention is selected from microwave excited electrodeless UV plasma lamp, UV laser, mercury lamp, spherical medium pressure UV lamp, or any other acceptable source of light.
The present invention further relate to a method for irradiating fluids, the method comprising accommodating fluid in a reactor, the walls of which are made of a transparent material, and the surrounding outside the wall is of a refractive index lower then that of the wall, and irradiating the accommodated fluid with light radiation aligned into the fluid in such an angle, such that light is transmitted through the fluid, and such that a major portion of light which leaves the fluid through its boundaries with the transparent wall is reflected back into the fluid or remains to shine along the transparent wall.
The method of the present invention refers either to operation modes wherein the fluid is in continuous flow during the irradiating process, as well as to operation modes wherein the fluid is held motionless for a predetermined time interval of the treatment.
According to various preferred embodiments of the invention the transparent material of the reactor is quartz.
According to various common uses of the method of the present invention, the fluid accommodated in the reactor is water or other liquid transparent to certain wave lengths of the light radiation.
According to various utilization ways of the method of the present invention the fluid accommodated in the reactor is water or other liquid transparent to certain wave lengths of the light radiation, and the method is further comprising launching the water from the outlet to form a free flow water jet with light radiation locked in total internal reflection within the jet.
The method of in-line disinfection according to the present invention may further comprising washing a surface or a container with the free flow jet, or filling a bottle or a container with the free flow jet. According to additional implementations of the method, it comprises filling a container with the free flow jet, and simultaneously evacuating the air rejected from the container by the liquid being filled, and suctioning it into a second reactor according to the present invention, or into a second flow channel in the same reactor in which the liquid is irradiated, for irradiating the air.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates to a method for irradiating fluids (mainly liquids, and most specifically water, however, as will be further explained, according to various embodiments air could be treated as well, and according to other embodiments portions of irradiation energy escaping the liquid flowing in one flow channel could be utilized for treatment of air in a separate flow channel), the method comprising accommodating (either in flow, otherwise immovably for a predetermined treatment time interval) liquid in a reactor (hereinafter will be referred to also as “tube”, “vessel” or “pipeline”) the walls of which are made of a transparent material preferably (in order to allow total internal reflection within a sufficiently wide range of angles of incidence of the light radiation) having a refractive index as close as possible to or lower than that of the liquid, and the surrounding outside the wall is of a refractive index lower then that of the transparent wall, and irradiating the accommodated liquid with light radiation aligned into the liquid in such an angle, such that light is transmitted through the liquid, and such that a major portion of light which leaves the liquid through its boundaries with the transparent wall is reflected back into the liquid (in most cases this reflection will preferably be designed as total internal reflection (TIR)) or remains to shine along the pipeline wall.
As will be further explained, light which remains trapped to shine inside the pipeline wall (due to total internal reflection between the wall boundaries with the water and between the wall boundaries with the air) could still be utilized when it exits through the pipeline edge. Furthermore and as will be explained in detail later on, light refracted out of the pipeline to the surrounding air, could still be utilized for irradiating the air.
It should be notified that method and devices for irradiation of liquids or of gases according to the present invention has mainly been developed by the inventors of the present invention for the purpose of disinfecting, decontaminating, sterilizing, or neutralizing hazardous biological or chemical substances that may exist in the liquids or gases to be treated. However, the present invention does not limit itself from other processes that could be carried out for the treatment of liquids or of gases using the method or the devices according to the present invention.
According to one preferred embodiment of the present invention, especially useful for irradiating water (having refractive index N1=1.33), the pipeline wall is made of quartz (having refractive index N2=1.54), and the surrounding is of air (having refractive index N3=1.0003).
The light energy is preferably directed into the liquid such that all light components will enter the liquid in angles greater then the critical angel for obtaining total internal reflection (TIR) of the light inside the liquid. However if so desired, it is possible to guide the light energy (or parts of it) in smaller angles in order to intentionally lose predetermined amounts of light energy, e.g. for irradiating the air around the pipeline or e.g. for having predetermined light energy emerging from the edge of the pipeline for irradiating a target opposite the edge.
Preferably, the quartz pipeline is placed inside a protective sleeve made of metal or of plastic, with an air gap in between. Spacers could be positioned near the ends of the pipeline or in predetermined intervals along its length in order to hold the pipeline with its longitudinal axis substantially overlapping that of the sleeve. The spacers could be made as integral protrusions protruding from the pipeline material, from the sleeve material, or from a separate material located or bonded between the sleeve and the pipeline, or a combination thereof.
According to various embodiments of the present invention, at least one light sensor is provided in the air gap between the sleeve and the pipeline for monitoring light characteristics. This could be helpful for obtaining real time information and using it as a feedback for controlling the light, or as an alarm for the water condition e.g. in washing water recycling system in a plant wherein a small amount of water is used according to the present invention for washing pre-filled containers and is disinfected in-line according to the method of the present invention. The water could thus be recycled until the monitored intensity, of the irradiating energy is decreasing beyond a predetermine lower limit which notifies the system that water turbidity percentage prevents effective disinfection, so that the used water should be replaced by fresh, or alternatively, UV light intensity should be increased until it comply with the current water conditions (i.e. until the monitored intensity returns above a predetermined threshold).
It should be appreciated that due to the internal reflection phenomenon (and preferably total internal reflection), the pipeline according to the present invention is not limited to straight paths, and it could be designed in a non linear manner according to local requirements of a specific plant e.g. bottle filing plant, water purifying plant etc.).
It should further be appreciated that due to the internal reflection inside the pipeline, the average path length made by the entire light photons emitted by a light source during a given time interval, is greater according to the present invention in tens of percents comparing to the average path length made by a similar dose of light photons directed into conventional pipes of straight lines, e.g. of U.S. Pat. No. 6,454,937 to Horton et. al. and of U.S. Pat. No. 5,200,156 to Wedekamp. In these patents, a photon that finds its direction diagonally to the pipe axis is absorbed by the pipe wall, while in the pipeline according to the present invention it will be reflected back into the liquid, zigzagging through the water all along the pipeline length.
Due to the longer light path per a given length reactor, and due to the possibility to “fold” the reactor by bending it in spirals or in windings, the reactor according to the present invention may have more compact design and could be adapted more easily to different design requirements as may exist in various sites and production lines were the disinfection system should be installed.
It should be noted however that the greater the path of the light inside the water is, the greater the light efficiency is. This is because the probability of every photon to meet bacteria (or other toxic specie or chemical) along its way is increased as its path length in the water increases.
Therefore, according to various preferred embodiments of the present invention the pipeline length is extended intentionally (i.e. in addition to the inherent path extension of the light due to the internal reflection) as a part of the design, thus increasing the water path length and the average light path length inside, respectively. To this end, the pipeline could be provided in winding format, or in spiral shape that will allow accommodating a pipe of a relatively long length in a disinfection device of relatively small dimensions. Such increase in the light path length through the water is inapplicable in prior art systems, and as could be appreciated from U.S. Pat. No. 6,454,937 to Horton et. al. and of U.S. Pat. No. 5,200,156 to Wedekamp, the UV energy is designed to be completely absorbed in the water in straight pipe lines. As could be appreciated, prior art disinfection systems are limited of having the light radiation passing windings in the pipeline. Accordingly, UV energy distribution in prior art systems, is designed such that energy is distributed laterally. Although both U.S. Pat. No. 6,454,937 to Horton et. al. and U.S. Pat. No. 5,200,156 to Wedekamp, are directed to in-line disinfection, i.e. to light distribution along the path of flow, both involves parallel distribution of the energy. Horton uses an array of parallel pipes, while Wedekamp uses an array of UV light sources within a chamber of an increased diameter in a mid portion of the pipeline. Although the present invention does not restricts itself from using parallel geometries, its main approach, contrarily to prior art systems, is to concentrate large light power through the length of the pipelines, in order to distribute the energy to maximum possible extent. While in prior art system the implementation of such approach will involve great lose of energy that will be absorbed by pipeline walls, the present invention allows for using powerful light pulses of pick powers of several orders greater then in prior art systems and without lose of efficiency, because in the present invention the water path could be extended as much as required for absorbing the entire light energy in the water.
The use of burst pulses of UV light having extreme pick power is known in its significantly efficient bacteria killing, comparing to similar amounts of energy when distributed averagely (e.g. in CW, or in relatively wide pulses i.e. pulses lasting for more then several microseconds and having moderate pick power declining in water after several tens of centimeters of absorbance). According to the present invention extremely high pick power pulses could be utilized and be adapted to pass through respective long flow paths (without being absorbed and get lost inside the pipeline walls as occur in prior art devices), due to the light conductivity of pipeline wall according to the present invention and due to the total internal reflection that could be achieved by surrounding the transparent pipe lines with a gap of air.
The present invention further relates to new geometry of coupling UV light (especially of light sources emitting the light from longitudinal tubes, e.g. Microwave Excited UV-Lamps, or various types of mercury UV lamps) into pipelines for the purpose of in-line disinfection.
According to this new geometry the UV light tube is positioned with its axis parallel to a substantially straight window made in or being the wall of a junction between two ends of pipe segments oriented with an angle between them both, the angle is preferably as twice or more wider than the critical angle for total internal reflection in the pipe segments, such that the light emitted from a substantially one half of the UV light tube length enters the window and irradiating the water accommodated in one of the pipe segments while the light emitted from substantially the second half of the UV light tube length enters the window and irradiating the water accommodated in the second of the two pipe segments. The UV light tube is equipped with a reflector on its backside (the side of it which is opposite to the window) which is designed to reflect light emitted from the backside of the tube or light reflected back from the window, back into the two pipe segments. Each of the pipe segments could be of a length and of a path form according to particular design considerations differing from one case to another. For example the pipe segment could be extended in windings or in spiral configuration for a length appropriate to efficient utilization of the energy of a predetermined light tube. Each segment could also be connected at its opposite end in a similar manner to another pipe segment, with a similar substantially straight window in the junction there between, wherein another light tube (and accompanied reflector) could be positioned for dividing its illumination between the two light segments. As may be appreciated, this configuration could be extended like a chain of pipe segments wherein each two of which are interconnected in an appropriate angle and having a substantially straight window in the junction thereof, useful for receiving the light from the UV light tube, with total internal reflection inside each of the segments. This architecture is advantageous no only in that it allows to design in-line disinfection systems without limitations concerning the liquid path length, but also in that it facilitate the maintenance of such disinfection systems by allowing replacement of malfunctioning light radiation sources during the disinfection process, i.e. without stopping the flow of liquid. Furthermore, it allows for adapting the number of active light radiation sources on-real time basis, according to the flow rate in the pipeline.
The present invention further relates to in-line disinfection system of fluids (mainly liquids, and most specifically water, however, as will be further explained, portions of irradiation energy escaping the liquid could be utilized for treatment of air), comprising (a) at least one pipeline segment, the walls of which are made of a transparent material having a refractive index close to or lower than that of the liquid, and the surrounding outside the wall is of a refractive index lower then that of the wall; (b) light radiation source aligned into the liquid in such an angle, such that its light could be transmitted through the liquid, and such that a major portion of light which may leave the liquid through its boundaries with the pipeline wall is reflected back into the liquid (preferably in total internal reflection (TIR)) or remains to shine along the pipeline wall.
As will be further explained, light which remains trapped to shine inside the pipeline wall (due to total internal reflection between the wall boundaries with the water and between the wall boundaries with the air) could still be utilized when it exits through the pipeline edge. Furthermore and as will be explained in detail later on, light refracted out of the pipeline to the surrounding air, could still be utilized for irradiating the air.
According to one preferred embodiment of the present invention, especially useful for irradiating water (having refractive index N1=1.33), the pipeline wall is-made of quartz (having refractive index N2=1.54), and the surrounding is of air (having refractive index N3=1.0003).
Preferably, the quartz pipeline is placed inside a protective sleeve made of metal or of plastic, with an air gap in between. Spacers could be positioned near the ends of the pipeline or in predetermined intervals along its length in order to hold the pipeline with its longitudinal axis substantially overlapping that of the sleeve. The spacers could be made as integral protrusions protruding from the pipeline material, from the sleeve material, or from a separate material located or bonded between the sleeve and the pipeline, or a combination thereof.
According to various embodiments of the present invention, at least one light sensor is provided in the air gap between the sleeve and the pipeline for monitoring light characteristics. This could be helpful for obtaining real time information and using it as a feedback for controlling the light, or as an alarm for the water condition e.g. in washing water recycling system in a plant wherein a small amount of water is used according to the present invention for washing pre-filled containers and is disinfected in-line according to the method of the present invention. The water could thus be recycled until the monitored intensity of the irradiating energy is decreasing beyond a predetermine lower limit which notifies the system that water turbidity percentage prevents effective disinfection, so that the used water should be replaced by fresh, or alternatively, UV light intensity should be increased until it comply with the current water conditions i.e. until the monitored intensity returns above a predetermined threshold).
According to various embodiments of the present invention, the reactor is made multi-core, i.e. the path of the liquid is through at least two pipelines each is of a different diameter, all of which are arranged one inside another about a substantially one common imaginary axis in a descending diameters order, such that a plurality of separate flow channels are created each between two parallel neighboring pipelines.
In order to understand the invention and to see how it may be carried out in practice, it will now be described, by way of non-limiting example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The scope of the present invention is not limited to any particular shape of the quartz tube or tubes. These could be designed to have plain cylindrical shape, or to have any other desired shape which does not unacceptably deteriorates its internal reflection properties. Accordingly, it may designed as to have (either in portions of it or in its entirety) a conical shape, an elliptical shape, a cubic shape, or combinations thereof.
According to this embodiment the reactor could be irradiated by light sources (6′) and (6″), from opposite directions. These light sources could be identical ones, or different ones, and they may be operated simultaneously, or separately, with correlation or without, all according to design considerations and according to disinfection process type.
A second flow path is provided between a second fluid inlet (277) made in the wall of the spacer (174) and communicating with an inlet aperture (171e) made near the left end of the external quartz wall of the double wall cylinder (171), and between a second fluid outlet (277a) made in the wall of the right hand spacer (174a) and communicating with an outlet aperture (171f) made near the right end of the external quartz wall of the double wall cylinder (171). Although the two flow paths are separate, they are both irradiated from the same light source (or sources) due to internal reflection between the outer wall of the double wall cylinder (171) which crosses the inner wall of this quartz made cylinder, as well.
By utilizing the aforementioned embodiments or combinations thereof, the method according to the present invention allows for coupling a plurality of light engines into a hydro-optical geometry, lasers or lamps externally to the reactor while keeping angular orientation in modular format allowing the construction of wide myriad of reactors for sterilization and oxidation of inflow, inline water effluent, flow or for sterilization and decontamination of air, gases, surfaces or combinations.
The method according to the present invention provides for inline treatment and sterilization of air or gas inflow in cheese drying rooms, in diaries and milk production sites, in agro food production factories and in biomedical and pharmaceutical industries, in electronic industries, in green houses, in domestic air-conditioning systems, and in critical air or gas passages to human dwellings, shopping centers and malls, conference rooms, hotels, and in urban concentrations.
The reactors of the present invention, and in particular the truncated modular A shape could be used for inline treatment and sterilization of municipal drinking water, Ultra Pure Water (UPW) water for electronic industries, processed water for paper industries, aquaculture and fisheries, mineral, spring and bottled water, HOD (Home & Office Delivery services), for 5 gallon water jugs industry, for cooler industries, water reclamation, waste water or any combination thereof, water for baby foods and for washing food and medicine packaging and for germ free production of pharmaceutical products or for bio-security of domestic, industrial, commercial and public water systems, for desalination plants and for cooling towers or combinations.
In order to enhance the disinfection procedures according to the method of the present invention, the treatment of the fluids may further comprise adding small concentrations (e.g. 0.001%, or e.g. 0.01% or e.g. 0.1%, or e.g. 0.3%, or any other required concentration as known standards allow according to the particular case) of oxidizing agents, e.g. H2O2, to the flowing fluid, which could then be dissociated by the UV light energy, during the disinfection process, forming free radicals which may very effectively destroy various bacteria species of violent nature.
The treatment procedure may further comprise dissolving into the liquid being treated oxygen, or air, in order to create internal light diffuser comprising of a plurality of refractive index profiles within the liquid, useful for homogenous diffusion of light energy in the water.
Claims
1. A liquid disinfection device comprising:
- a pipeline to hold flowing liquid to be treated with ultraviolet (UV) radiation, the pipeline comprising walls made of UV-transparent material and surrounded by air, a liquid inlet and a liquid outlet and one or more UV-transparent windows;
- one or more UV light sources positioned externally to the pipeline to generate light to be transmitted through the one or more windows into the flowing liquid within the pipeline; and
- one or more reflectors to reflect light generated by the UV light source into the flowing liquid within the pipeline, wherein the reflected light strikes the walls of the pipeline at angles of incidence greater than a critical angle for total internal reflection to enable the total internal reflection.
2. The liquid disinfection device of claim 1, wherein the walls of the pipeline are made of quartz.
3. The liquid disinfection device of claim 1, wherein the pipeline is positioned inside a protective sleeve with an air gap in between.
4. The liquid disinfection device of claim 1, wherein the window is provided with an optical filter to block light of a predetermined wavelength spectrum from entering the pipeline.
5. The liquid disinfection device of claim 1, further comprising one or more light detectors to detect light energy at one or more predetermined regions of the pipeline, and a controller to control one or more disinfection-related parameters of said disinfection device based on the detected light energy.
6. The liquid disinfection device of claim 1, wherein a first one of said UV-light sources is positioned in proximity to the liquid inlet and a second one of said UV-light sources is positioned in proximity to the liquid outlet.
7. The liquid disinfection device of claim 1, wherein one of said UV-transparent windows is located in proximity to the liquid inlet such that the liquid flows in a space between the window and the pipeline.
8. A method for disinfecting liquids by ultraviolet (UV) light, the method comprising:
- accommodating flowing liquid to be disinfected in a pipeline comprising walls made of a UV-transparent material;
- positioning a UV-transparent window externally to the pipeline leaving a space between said window and said pipeline for liquid to flow;
- generating UV light externally to the pipeline to be transmitted trough the UV-transparent window into the flowing liquid within the pipeline; and
- reflecting, with a reflector, the UV light into the liquid flowing through the pipeline such that light is transmitted through the window into the liquid, and such that a major portion of said light strikes the walls of the pipeline at angles of incidence greater than a critical angle for total internal reflection to enable the total internal reflection.
9. The method according to claim 8, wherein the transparent material is quartz.
Type: Application
Filed: Mar 23, 2010
Publication Date: Jul 15, 2010
Inventors: Zamir TRIBELSKY (Mevaseret Tzion), Ytzhak Rozenberg (Ramat Gan), Uri Levy (Rehovot), Joseph Rabani (Jerusalem)
Application Number: 12/729,326
International Classification: A61L 2/10 (20060101); A61L 2/24 (20060101);