This little plug-in ozone generator is useful but quite noisy. It uses a corona discharge in a ceramic tube with air being blown through it, to produce a modest flow of ozone into the surrounding area.
The corona generation itself is quite noticeable as a continuous high frequency hiss, but that is dwarfed by the crappy fan that makes all the noises you'd associate with a fan with worn bearings.
The circuitry inside is split into two distinct sections. A well designed 12V switchmode power supply and an NE555 timer chip driven MOSFET driving a resin-potted high voltage transformer.
The ozone generation device is quite neat. It's a short length of ceramic tube with a bit of copper tape wrapped around the outside and the tube is then mounted into a suitably sized hole in the PCB and the copper tape soldered in place. The central electrodes are stainless steel pins shaped so that they press into turned pin sockets and are then positioned against the internal sides of the tube.
The high voltage, high frequency potential causes current flow back and forth between the pins and the tubes outer electrode, but because the ceramic acts as an insulator it behaves as a capacitor with an air/ceramic insulator and the energy transfer back and forth manifests as a purple corona discharge of lots of tiny little sparks. Air is pushed through the tube by a small and very noisy fan, and as it passes through the corona discharge the oxygen (O2) gets broken into separate oxygen molecules that reform randomly as O2 and O3 (ozone). Ozone is unstable so on contact with oxidisable surfaces it liberates the spare third oxygen molecule and oxidises whatever it attaches to.
You could consider ozone as an airborne gaseous bleach.
The quality of the circuitry is actually very high. It doesn't look like a cheap Chinese product, but looks more like a small quantity hand-built product. The only thing that really lets it down is the cheap and nasty fan. But that is probably a standard size and easily changed.
The corona generation itself is quite noticeable as a continuous high frequency hiss, but that is dwarfed by the crappy fan that makes all the noises you'd associate with a fan with worn bearings.
The circuitry inside is split into two distinct sections. A well designed 12V switchmode power supply and an NE555 timer chip driven MOSFET driving a resin-potted high voltage transformer.
The ozone generation device is quite neat. It's a short length of ceramic tube with a bit of copper tape wrapped around the outside and the tube is then mounted into a suitably sized hole in the PCB and the copper tape soldered in place. The central electrodes are stainless steel pins shaped so that they press into turned pin sockets and are then positioned against the internal sides of the tube.
The high voltage, high frequency potential causes current flow back and forth between the pins and the tubes outer electrode, but because the ceramic acts as an insulator it behaves as a capacitor with an air/ceramic insulator and the energy transfer back and forth manifests as a purple corona discharge of lots of tiny little sparks. Air is pushed through the tube by a small and very noisy fan, and as it passes through the corona discharge the oxygen (O2) gets broken into separate oxygen molecules that reform randomly as O2 and O3 (ozone). Ozone is unstable so on contact with oxidisable surfaces it liberates the spare third oxygen molecule and oxidises whatever it attaches to.
You could consider ozone as an airborne gaseous bleach.
The quality of the circuitry is actually very high. It doesn't look like a cheap Chinese product, but looks more like a small quantity hand-built product. The only thing that really lets it down is the cheap and nasty fan. But that is probably a standard size and easily changed.
Red and Black for AC?!? ๐
Does this really works
What would cause one of these to put out less ozone? I have one that is probably 10 years old. I have cleaned the fan and the ceramic tube. The ceramic tube keeps getting a build up of white stuff in it. Also like a brown resin around tube. Looks like fluxes. Would like to repair it and get it working like it use to
I run my 12V fan at a little lower voltage, say 10V. That reduces the output a little but the noise a lot.
Yet another great teardown.
Clive you always find the cool and interesting things to analyze
Clive. It would be nice if you'd reply.
You are my Hero Clive. I seem to come across your videos whenever I am looking to use new technology. Incidentally, I have also seen you video on the pink mist-doughnut thingy, and it seems that we must share a real interest. Please keep going with your videos and I wish you the best.
Ooh, so you can produce a dangerous gas at home.
I see lots of plug in adaptors with the same 'upside down' plug problem. I'm not sure what's wrong with manufacturers