June 18, 2024. A customer named Caroline B. in Yalecrest — the same homeowner whose heat pump conversion and IAQ upgrades appear across multiple service pages — called us about a persistent musty smell from the supply registers during AC operation. Her system was only 8 months old (the fall 2024 Mitsubishi PUZ-A48NHA cold-climate heat pump install), so the symptom was unusual. Marcus Halverson inspected the indoor coil through the inspection port: a thin biofilm had developed on the lower portion of the evaporator coil and along the drain pan, despite the system being new. Salt Lake’s summer monsoon humidity (mid-July through early September) had created sufficient moisture on the coil during AC operation to support biological growth. Mold and bacteria were colonizing the wet surface during operation, releasing their distinctive odor into the supply air when the system ran. Standard cleaning would address the current contamination; preventing recurrence required either eliminating the moisture (which isn’t possible — condensate is intrinsic to AC operation) or sterilizing the surface continuously. Our recommendation: Reme-Halo LED installed in the supply plenum near the coil, providing continuous UV-C exposure plus photocatalytic active treatment. Total installed: $545. Caroline’s coil stayed clean throughout the summer; the musty smell didn’t return. The case is typical of where UV light treatment actually delivers value — specific biological control applications where moisture conditions support continuous growth that filtration alone can’t address.
UV light treatment is one of the most marketing-corrupted areas of indoor air quality, sitting alongside duct cleaning and “antimicrobial fogging” in terms of overstated claims. The legitimate version — UV-C germicidal irradiation (UVGI) at the 253.7 nm wavelength — has real, well-documented antimicrobial effects when properly applied to surfaces with sufficient exposure intensity and duration. The dubious versions — bipolar ionization without independent testing, ozone-producing UV-C, broad-spectrum UV that doesn’t actually do anything — are products of marketing rather than science. This page covers what UV-C actually does, when it’s warranted, the equipment we install, and what to avoid. For broader IAQ context see the indoor air quality services hub.
UV-C is the high-energy ultraviolet wavelength range (200-280 nm) most effective at damaging microbial DNA and RNA. The 253.7 nm wavelength is the standard for germicidal applications because:
The actual germicidal effect requires sufficient exposure dose. For specific microorganisms, peer-reviewed research establishes the UV-C dose required for 99% (1-log reduction), 99.9% (3-log), or 99.99% (4-log) inactivation. Most common bacteria and viruses require 6-30 mJ/cm² for 99% inactivation; mold spores require higher doses (40-80 mJ/cm²). UV-C systems must be sized and positioned to deliver these doses to be effective.
UV-C installation should be specific-issue-driven. If you have musty smells, recurring biological contamination, immunocompromised household members, or specific concerns we can address, schedule an assessment. We won’t sell UV-C unless it solves a real problem.