The short answer
Photocatalytic oxidation (PCO) purifiers using titanium dioxide (TiO2) and UV light are marketed to cannabis operators as air treatment technology. The mechanism is real: UV light activates the TiO2 catalyst to produce hydroxyl radicals and other reactive oxidants in the air stream passing through the device. The documented problem for cannabis environments specifically is the byproduct profile from incomplete oxidation. When hydroxyl radicals react with cannabis terpenes — monoterpenes, sesquiterpenes, and other terpenoid compounds present in high concentrations in flowering rooms — they produce formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, and other aldehyde-class secondary oxidation compounds. These byproducts are well-documented in peer-reviewed research on PCO systems in indoor environments. AIRRox™ provides registered odor and VOC management without the incomplete-oxidation byproduct risk that PCO systems generate from cannabis-specific organic compound profiles.
About AIRRox™ ClO2 environmental management
AIRRox™ is CLEANTheory's facility environmental management product, deploying 3-precursor ClO2 chemistry as automated, timed-release treatment throughout the cultivation environment. AIRRox™ operates under EPA Reg. No. 73139-1 (Sabre Oxidation Technologies).
AIRRox™ neutralizes odors and reduces surface-level mycotoxin residues in the facility environment. It does not generate byproducts from incomplete organic molecule oxidation — ClO2 is not the same chemistry as PCO catalysis and does not produce formaldehyde or acetaldehyde as reaction byproducts from terpene oxidation at registered deployment concentrations.
AIRRox™ is an odor and VOC management product. It does not carry pesticidal registration or airborne pathogen kill claims. All claims are limited to what the EPA registration covers: odor neutralization, VOC management, and surface-level mycotoxin residue control.
AIRRox™ delivers CLEANTheory's 3-precursor ClO2 program as automated, timed-release facility environmental management, providing registered odor neutralization and surface-level mycotoxin residue management without the incomplete-oxidation byproducts that PCO systems generate from cannabis terpenes and other organic compounds.
How they compare
| Criteria |
AIRRox™ ClO2 environmental management EPA Reg. 73139-1 · Odor & VOC management |
PCO / TiO2 purifiers |
| Mechanism |
Selective oxidation at known, managed ClO2 concentrations; consistent, predictable reaction profile |
UV light activates TiO2 catalyst to generate hydroxyl radicals and other ROS in the air stream; output depends on lamp age, catalyst condition, humidity, and organic load |
| Odor management |
Registered odor neutralization under EPA Reg. No. 73139-1; documented performance |
Vendor claims for odor reduction; some real-world odor reduction observed; not EPA-registered for odor control with independently reviewed performance data |
| Byproduct profile |
No formaldehyde or aldehyde-class byproducts from terpene oxidation at registered deployment concentrations |
Incomplete oxidation of terpenes, VOCs, and other organics produces formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, and other aldehyde compounds; documented in peer-reviewed research on PCO systems in indoor environments |
| Terpene interaction |
No terpene degradation or secondary compound production documented at registered concentrations |
Hydroxyl radicals react non-selectively with cannabis terpenes; monoterpene and sesquiterpene oxidation produces aldehydes and peroxides; product quality concern in flowering rooms |
| Airborne pathogen claims |
AIRRox™ does not make airborne pathogen kill claims |
PCO devices marketed for pathogen control in some applications; not EPA-registered for this in cannabis grow environments; claims are vendor-generated |
| Occupancy |
No occupancy restrictions at registered concentrations; safe for continuous production-environment use |
Hydroxyl radical generation occurs within the device enclosure; byproduct exposure risk in the room environment varies by device design and leakage; no standard occupancy protocol across brands |
| Treatment scope |
Facility-wide continuous environmental management; not limited to air stream passing through a device |
Air-stream treatment only; treats air passing through the device; room areas not circulating through the unit receive limited treatment |
| EPA registration |
EPA Reg. No. 73139-1 — odor management and surface-level mycotoxin residue control |
Not EPA-registered as disinfectants or antimicrobials; sold as air purification equipment; no independent regulatory review of specific performance claims for cannabis environments |
| Documentation |
EPA registration provides independently reviewed claims framework; product labeling defines use sites and concentrations |
Vendor documentation; no independent regulatory review of product claims for specific organisms or environments |
| Operational model |
Managed program; automated deployment; monitoring by CLEANTheory |
Device sold as standalone equipment; lamp and catalyst replacement required at intervals; output degrades with lamp age and catalyst contamination |
Comparison reflects typical commercial cannabis cultivation use. PCO device performance varies significantly by brand, lamp condition, catalyst age, and organic load. Byproduct production depends on specific organic compounds present and device design.
What PCO / TiO2 purifiers do well
PCO technology is a genuine air treatment approach used in commercial HVAC systems, food processing facilities, and hospitals. The mechanism — UV light activating a TiO2 catalyst to produce hydroxyl radicals — produces measurable oxidative activity in the air stream passing through the device.
In test chamber conditions, PCO systems have demonstrated reductions in airborne VOCs, some bacteria, and select virus types. For low-organic-load environments where byproduct accumulation is not a concern, PCO systems can provide meaningful air treatment. The technology has a documented performance record in specific, well-characterized applications.
Some PCO devices are compact and easy to install, requiring only an electrical connection without HVAC integration. For operators looking for a low-installation-cost air treatment option, these devices represent a lower barrier than ducted or fogged systems.
Where PCO / TiO2 purifiers fall short for cannabis cultivation
The byproduct problem is specific to high-organic-load environments. Cannabis flowering rooms are among the highest-terpene-load indoor environments outside of citrus processing facilities. Monoterpenes (limonene, myrcene, pinene) and sesquiterpenes (caryophyllene, humulene) volatilize from developing flowers at significant concentrations throughout the flowering cycle.
When PCO-generated hydroxyl radicals encounter these terpene compounds, the reaction does not produce clean CO2 and water. Incomplete oxidation — which occurs at the concentrations and contact times available in a pass-through air device — produces aldehydes, particularly formaldehyde and acetaldehyde. This is not a theoretical concern: it is documented in multiple peer-reviewed studies on PCO systems operating in indoor environments with terpene-containing air streams.
Formaldehyde is a known carcinogen. Acetaldehyde is an irritant and probable carcinogen. Both are regulated compounds in indoor air quality frameworks. For licensed cannabis operators, introducing these compounds into the production environment via a purifier system is not a direction any regulatory or quality framework supports.
Catalyst and lamp degradation reduce output over time. TiO2 catalyst efficiency degrades with organic matter accumulation on the catalyst surface and UV lamp output declines with hours of operation. An operator who installs a PCO device and does not regularly replace lamps and clean or replace catalyst media has no reliable way to know what treatment output the device is currently providing.
Treatment is limited to air passing through the device. Like HEPA and carbon filtration, PCO is a pass-through technology: it treats air that circulates through the device. Room areas with limited circulation, ceiling corners, under-bench areas, and surfaces throughout the grow room receive no treatment from a PCO air device.
Why registered chemistry matters for environmental management
Cannabis cultivation facilities face a specific compliance context: state licensing, product testing, and potential regulatory scrutiny create accountability for what chemistries are deployed, where, and with what claimed effects. A PCO device's marketing claims for pathogen reduction or VOC control have not been reviewed by the EPA in the context of licensed cannabis cultivation. The performance assertions are vendor-generated.
AIRRox™ operates under an EPA registration that specifies the active ingredient, use sites, concentrations, and approved claims. When a cultivator uses AIRRox™, they have a documented, independently reviewed chemistry basis for their environmental management program. That is a different category than "the device's spec sheet says it reduces mold."
For operators currently using PCO devices: the byproduct concern in high-terpene environments is the most immediate issue to evaluate. If the device is running in a flowering room or any room with meaningful terpene load, an assessment of ambient aldehyde concentration is worth conducting before continuing use.
How CLEANTheory addresses this
Registered chemistry without the byproduct risk of PCO
AIRRox™
Provides registered odor neutralization and surface-level mycotoxin residue management under EPA Reg. No. 73139-1, without the incomplete-oxidation aldehyde byproducts that PCO systems generate from cannabis terpenes at production-environment organic load levels.
Consulting
CLEANTheory's facility assessment evaluates the current air and environmental management program, including any PCO or air purification devices currently in use. The assessment identifies byproduct exposure risk in flowering rooms and positions AIRRox™ as the registered chemistry alternative that provides documented environmental management without that risk.
Book a free assessment
Key takeaways
- PCO / TiO2 purifiers use a real mechanism — UV-activated titanium dioxide generating hydroxyl radicals — with documented performance in low-organic-load environments; the technology is not without merit in specific applications.
- In cannabis flowering rooms, incomplete oxidation of high-concentration terpenes by PCO-generated hydroxyl radicals produces formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, and other aldehyde compounds; this is documented in peer-reviewed research, not a theoretical concern.
- Formaldehyde and acetaldehyde are regulated compounds and known or probable carcinogens; introducing them into the cultivation environment via an air treatment device is not supported by any cannabis quality or regulatory framework.
- PCO catalyst and lamp efficiency degrade over time without replacement; operators cannot reliably verify actual treatment output without independent monitoring.
- PCO is a pass-through technology; treatment is limited to air circulating through the device; surface contamination and room areas with limited air circulation are not addressed.
- AIRRox™ provides registered odor and VOC management under EPA Reg. No. 73139-1, with documented use sites and concentrations, without the aldehyde byproduct risk that PCO systems create in high-terpene cannabis production environments.