While using Electrolyzed Water as a natural cleaning agent might sound unusual, electrolysis technology actually dates back to the 1960s and has already been adopted in many parts of the world as a safer and more effective alternative to chemicals.

In Japan, for instance, e-water is the norm, and they reap the benefits of lower infection rates and minimized pathogenic growth. While America lags a bit in implementation, many domestic facilities are fed up with the hazards of chemicals and off-the-charts microbial counts and are changing over to our natural solutions in a hurry.

Up until now, though, there has been a serious impediment to widespread application of e-water in the United States. And that is the fact that other forms of this solution necessarily contain salt in their final product. It would be catastrophic over the long term for any facility with expensive or sensitive equipment to clean with a salt-based solution.

That’s where we come in. The reason Viking Pure equipment is patented is that we have developed an innovation in the production process of e-water that removes salt from the final solution. This means facilities can use Viking Pure’s electrostatic spray to cover every inch of their premises, killing germs on contact without risk of corrosion.

Electrolyzed Water is the result of a process called electrolysis: salt is electrically separated into its two main ions, sodium and chloride. Those two ions are then mixed into separate streams of fresh water, producing two solutions: Hypochlorous Acid (Viking Pure Disinfectant) and Sodium Hydroxide (Viking Pure Cleaner). These are the two kinds of e-water solutions Viking Pure generators produce: a surface cleaner called Viking Pure Cleaner and a disinfectant called Viking Pure Disinfectant. Viking Pure Cleaner is a highly powerful all-natural alkaline water solution. Viking Pure Disinfectant is hypochlorous acid, the same thing your body produces in response to an infection.

Both of these products are safer, stronger, and more sustainable than the harsh chemical products most commonly used around the United States today. Most importantly, they are more effective at killing bacteria and stopping the spread of disease, which means they can play an important role in creating the safer, healthier world we envision for the future.