Cryonite Effect

Carbon dioxide snow (“dry ice” snow) is very cold,  -78°C (-108°F). And, thus, the method kills bugs by rapid freezing. The Cryonite effect – the rapid freezing – is dependent on a certain mix of particle sizes and speeds.

The cooling occurs in several phases, where each phase has an optimal combination of a particle size and a particle speed, for attaining maximum cooling rate.

The speed is an integral part of the freezing itself. For the energy transfer to be efficient, the snow-particles need good contact with the target (bug or surface). A high speed makes for a good, contact-making impact on the target.

The speed is also an integral part of the freezing itself and helps the snow penetration deep into thin cracks and crevices, in buildings as well as in machines, and also propels them through long pipes.

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xfsdu2_the-best-hospitals-bedbug-insurance-plan_news Cryonite Video