Ozone is a molecule made of three oxygen atoms (O₃). It is one of the strongest naturally occurring oxidizers known — much stronger than chlorine.

  • Oxidation potential: Ozone ≈ 2.07 V vs. Chlorine ≈ 1.36 V → Ozone is about 3,000 times faster and 50 times more effective as a sanitizer than chlorine in many conditions.

When ozone dissolves in water, it quickly breaks down into ordinary oxygen (O₂) and highly reactive hydroxyl radicals (•OH) — these attack and destroy contaminants without leaving harmful residues.

  1. Kills Microorganisms (Bacteria, Viruses, Fungi, Yeasts)
    • Ozone damages cell membranes, oxidizes proteins, lipids, and DNA/RNA of microbes → leads to cell rupture and instant inactivation.
    • Very effective against pathogens like E. coli, Salmonella, Listeria, molds, yeasts, and even some viruses.
    • Studies show 1–3 log reductions (90–99.9% kill) in microbial load on produce like lettuce, spinach, tomatoes, cabbage, and berries after short washes (1–10 minutes).
  2. Degrades Pesticide Residues
    • Ozone oxidizes and breaks down many pesticide molecules (especially organophosphates, carbamates, pyrethroids like chlorpyrifos, malathion, cypermethrin, etc.).
    • Reductions of 50–100% are commonly reported depending on pesticide type, concentration, wash time, and ozone strength.
    • Examples:
      • Up to 90–100% reduction in some organophosphate residues on apples, grapes, tomatoes, strawberries.
      • 5-minute ozone wash often achieves near-maximum degradation for many pesticides.
  3. Removes Organic Matter & Improves Wash Water
    • Oxidizes dirt, biofilms, and organic contaminants suspended in water.
    • Helps keep wash water cleaner longer (unlike chlorine, which forms harmful byproducts like trihalomethanes).
  4. No Harmful Residues
    • After reacting, ozone naturally decomposes back into pure oxygen within minutes (half-life in water is short).
    • Leaves no chemical residue — unlike chlorine, bleach, or many commercial washes.
MethodMicrobial
Reduction
(typical log)
Pesticide
Removal
Residue
Left
Behind?
By-products?Shelf-Life Impact
Plain
Water
0.5–1.5 logVery lowNoNoneMinimal improvement
Chlorine
Wash
1.5–3.0 logModerateYes (can
form
residues)
Harmful
(chloramines,
THMs)
Good, but can affect
taste/quality
Ozone
Wash
1.5–3.5+ log
(often better)
High (50–
100%)
NoNone (just O₂)Often best — slows
respiration, retains
firmness & quality
  • Ozone achieves 1–2.5 log reductions in total bacteria, coliforms, molds, and yeasts on fresh-cut produce (lettuce, spinach, cabbage, tomatoes, onions, etc.).
  • Longer exposure (3–10 min) and higher concentrations (0.5–2 ppm) generally give better results, but too long can be limited by organic matter consuming ozone.
  • Bubbling ozone (sparging) is more effective than just dipping in pre-ozonated water because it creates higher local concentrations at the surface.
  • It preserves or even improves quality: slows respiration rate, maintains firmness, reduces browning in some cases, and extends shelf life without harming nutrients or appearance.
  • Effectiveness depends on: ozone concentration, contact time, temperature (colder water holds more ozone), produce type (rough surfaces need longer), and how it’s applied (bubbling > dipping).
  • Not 100% effective on every single pesticide or deeply embedded contaminants — but significantly better than plain water or chlorine for most surface residues.
  • Must be done with proper equipment to maintain consistent ozone levels