UV light really can kill Coronavirus, founder says — and his tech proves it from the inside
July 2, 2020 | Austin Barnes
Outfitting existing HVAC systems with ultraviolet lighting in offices and public spaces could be the most sustainable, long-term solution to eliminating the Coronavirus — and fears over returning to work, said Dave Ogle.
“I know there’s a lot of jokes. President Trump [talking about] sticking UV up people’s rear ends — which is total nonsense,” joked Ogle, founder of Tech-UV, referencing skeptics of UVC technology who’ve dismissed its power based on the commander in chief’s now infamous faux pas.
“They just didn’t understand how UVC has been effective for treating bacteria, germs and viruses and it goes back a long way,” he continued, detailing beginnings of the virus-killing solution that date back to the 1800s, as well as get-rich-quick schemes that are using its promises to cash in with misleading products on retail sites like Amazon.
“They’re way off spectrum. They’re just purple light. And people are buying these by the droves and scanning their phones and keyboards and other things in the house thinking like, ‘Oh, this is a disinfectant,’ when actually it doesn’t work at all,” he said.
Lawrence-based Tech-UV: Ultraviolet Germicidal Systems — Ogle’s pandemic-founded startup spun out of a 25-year career in HVAC maintenance — builds on a family-owned business that’s been offering installation of UVC lights in systems for decades.
But until recently, the technology has seen little interest, he said.
“It was very few and far between. You could only sell it if there was already a situation in the building — like really dirty air, if there was high humidity with a high occupancy, or moldy ductwork,” he explained.
As COVID-19 crept in, so did opportunity, Ogle added.
“[There are four types of ultraviolet light]. The really potent UVC — which is 250 to 260 nanometers in wavelength — that’s the really harsh stuff. That’s the kind of stuff that will burn your skin, burn the cornea of your eyes. It’s lethal,” he explained, noting that by hiding the powerful light inside air ducts it creates a safe barrier that can’t harm humans and annihilates airborne pathogens pushed through the air in a way that’s chemical-free.
“We found that Coronavirus is really easy to kill. In fact — over a square meter — if you do a one-second pass through of a lighting rack with one-second exposure time, Coronavirus 99.9 percent of the time is dead with about 40 Watts of UV,” Ogle explained, adding such a success rate with a low wattage makes the virus no match for a second pass.
“It will not survive it. Boom.”
Click here to read more about how Tech-UV works.
In recent months, more than 60 businesses and office buildings have bought into the promise of Tech-UV, including the Charles Curtis State Office Building in Topeka — home of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
“Isn’t that ironic?” Ogle asked, amused by the ties and how his months-old startup could ultimately prove to be the necessary solution that gets state workers back into the office.
“The Curtis Building will be the single largest project we’ve ever taken on, without a doubt,” he said of the project — which came to Tech-UV as part of a partnership with P1 Group, the Lenexa-based facility maintenance and construction company.
“The air handlers inside their building are absolutely massive and they’re moving a crazy amount of air. There’s five floors total and each floor is moving 57,000 cubic feet per minute,” he said, noting more than 5,800 watts of UV will be installed in the air ducts on each floor.
Project contractors and decision makers in Topeka were immediately impressed by the Tech-UV data and couldn’t say no to taking a chance on the emerging disinfecting method, Ogle said.
“We see doing every state, county, and city building in the State of Kansas without a doubt,” he said. “And we will have the data from the Curtis Building after the install and can show everyone, ‘Hey, this is real and it works.’”
Even without data, customers are lining up to try the cost effective solution as they entertain reopening facilities, Ogle said.
“It’s not that expensive. We bid [a dental clinic] at like $4,600 and the bulb change out is less than 300 bucks a year,” he said. “We’ve got office buildings between Wichita, Kansas City, Lawrence and Topeka lined up. … The demand is going to be so large.”
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
As new terminal nears, Cowork KCI sells amid 87-acre development along airport corridor
Cowork KCI might have new owners, but the coworking veterans behind the Northland venture aren’t stepping too far away from the gate, they said. The 8,000-square-foot flex office space at 12200 N Ambassador Drive — less than a five-minute drive from Kansas City International Airport — has sold to the Ambassador Building. Robert L. Curland and…
Chatbots to wedding insurance: Meet the four premium InsurTech startups selected for KC’s bcp tech accelerator
Four of the industry’s most-promising seed stage startups — an international mix of insurtech solutions — are expected to be the beneficiaries of Kansas City’s extensive insurance expertise, explained Nathan Kurtz, announcing the second cohort of the LaunchKC-backed bcp tech InsurTech accelerator. “We are very insurance focused,” said Kurtz, COO of Brush Creek Partners (bcp). “And there’s…
Edna Martinson notches another big win for Boddle, earning $100K from Google for Startups fund
The second cohort of a Google for Startups program focused on high potential ventures from Black entrepreneurs features a high-profile founder who built her company in Kansas City before relocating to Tulsa in 2020. The Black Founders Fund announced the selection of Edna Martinson, co-founder of Boddle Learning, Tuesday in a rollout of the 50…
WATCH: Startland News Reports – Kansas City VC-Backed Companies
Join Startland News for another edition of Startland News Reports as findings from its 2021 Kansas City VC-Backed Companies Report — a collaboration between UMKC’s Tech Venture Studio and Startland News — inform candid conversations with Kansas City-based startup founders and venture capital experts.

