Lenexa aerospace startup launches indoor drone that could kill Coronavirus with ultraviolet waves

April 9, 2020  |  Austin Barnes

Aertos 120-UVC, Digital Aerolous

Editor’s note: The following is part of Startland News’ ongoing coverage of the impact of Coronavirus (COVID-19) on Kansas City’s entrepreneur community, as well as how innovation is helping to drive a new normal in the ecosystem. Click here to follow related stories as they develop.

While winds of change have plenty of businesses pivoting product offerings, Digital Aerolus isn’t one of them — instead turning up the heat on its patented disinfectant tech. 

Digital Aerolus

Founding date: 2017

Founders: Jeff Alholm and Rod Underdown

Funding raised to date: Bootstrapped, undisclosed

Team size: 34

“I see this as less of us jumping on the bandwagon and more of us doing what we’re good at and trying to make the world a safer place,” Jameson Huckaba, director of product and business development, said of the Lenexa-based aerospace startup’s latest creation, the Aertos 120-UVC — a drone that can fly into tight spaces and uses 265 nanometers of ultraviolet wavelengths to kill germs that routine cleaning can’t. 

“It’s like the worst sunburn that you’ve ever had in your entire life — and it happens within seconds,” he added, noting production on the illness-killing drone has ramped up in light of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. “[The ultraviolet waves] actually physically damage the DNA of cells or of living organisms or viruses, so they’re unable to reproduce. That genetic material is damaged beyond repair.”

Operating the drone is its own act of social distancing, Huckaba noted. An operator stands outside the affected area with a controller and navigates the semi-autonomous cleaning process from start to finish.

Aertos 120-UVC, Digital Aerolous

Aertos 120-UVC, Digital Aerolus

“Generally speaking, the drone will disinfect approximately one thousand cubic feet every 10 minutes and you can consider [a room] clean at that point,” he said. 

An industrial product with an industrial price tag — undisclosed by Digital Aerolus — Huckaba said the Aertos 120-UVC is expected to start shipping by the end of the month.

“We just wanted to create something that was helpful to people. We’re taking a look at hospital rooms and airplanes for instance,” he said of potential uses for the product, adding the company does a large chunk of its work with Kansas City-based engineering firms.

“We’re able to fly this drone inside an empty airplane and disinfect tray tables and seats. We’re actually able to fly it under the seats to disinfect those spaces or kill whatever sorts of nasty pathogens happen to be hanging out in that space.”

Such an ability could be the cure to a common concern for Americans still required to travel during the pandemic, Huckaba said. 

The Aertos 120-UVC drone provides UVC disinfection capabilities in such areas as:
• Healthcare facilities (patient rooms, hospital rooms, and waiting areas)
• Grocery stores (checkout spaces)
• Warehouses and product handling areas
• Airplanes and public transit (seats and exposed surfaces)
• Business common areas (restrooms, workrooms, breakroom surface areas)

“We’re taking a look at the environment — we serve critical industries. These drones are doing jobs that you wouldn’t want a human being to do.”

Manufacturing an increasing volume of drones amid the global health crisis has presented the Digital Aerolus team with a challenge of its own — navigating production in the trenches of a Stay At Home order, Huckaba explained. 

“We have strict social distancing guidelines,” he said. “We do many of our meetings now in our largest conference room to make sure there’s adequate space around us. … We also happen to go through what few remaining disinfectant wipes we can find just like everyone else in Kansas City.”

While the team’s production team is staying six feet apart, its engineering and office staff is staying at home, Huckaba said. 

“It has affected us, but with that said, we recognize that what we’re doing is essential to the people that we serve who keep the country running and we are determined to move forward in the safest way possible,” he said. 

Click here to learn more about Digital Aerolus technology and its Mind of Motion framework.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2020 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Best in show: Bar K vies for USA Today’s dog bar prize; here’s how a shared love of dogs is pushing expansion

        By Tommy Felts | June 13, 2024

        The human-dog bond — and a desire to embrace it at places like Bar K’s innovative bar, restaurant, and dog park experience — is stronger than today’s often partisan and divisive climate, said David Hensley. “It doesn’t matter your political affiliations … where you’re from, your socioeconomic status,” he said. “Everybody loves dogs, and that…

        Firm with deep KC ties wins Small Business of the Year thanks to tenacity, hyperlocal focus

        By Tommy Felts | June 13, 2024

        Editor’s note: The Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce is a non-financial partner of Startland News, which serves as the media partner for the Small Business Superstars program. A decades-long commitment to Kansas City clients — and the belief that rising tides lift all ships — helped propel Walz Tetrick Advertising to the award stage…

        How this genre-hopping KC musician is fighting back against digitized entertainment

        By Tommy Felts | June 13, 2024

        A former college football star, Keelon Vann often found himself “running on fumes” as he chased his passion on the field — and on key. “I’d be up playing guitar until 3 a.m., which is not a joke, and somehow make it to 5:30 a.m. workouts the next day,” said Vann, a quarterback at Piper High…

        New collaboration will help OP startup 3D bioprint, scale its next-gen biotech solution

        By Tommy Felts | June 12, 2024

        A Kansas biotech startup’s new manufacturing partner will boost efforts to automate and mass produce Ronawk’s headline-grabbing Bio-Block technology — a platform that has already accelerated medical advancements in tissue therapy. “Collaboration is critical for turning research advances into commercial therapies rapidly. The complexity and diversity of modalities is so big that nobody can do…