Dentists have always been about safety

Carry on the Legacy

What the RECIRCULATOR II can do for dental practices

Exceed Class A – Compliancy for your operatories

Why I Chose the RECIRCULATOR II

Dr. Jason Ellis

My Dental Safety Protocols

Ridgeline Dental, Eugene, OR

Get back to work

Dental practices need to address airborne threats now. The RECIRCULATOR II is your fastest solution--it's portable & it lets you to convert rooms into negative pressure rooms.

Ease client concerns

You can increase the comfort of your patients and their families with a hospital-grade air purification device, especially designed for threats like COVID-19.

protect employees

Perhaps the most vulnerable people in your practice are your employees. You expect the best from them, so give them the best when it comes to protection and peace of mind.

serve at-risk patients

The RECIRCULATOR II can help you meet the special needs of elderly and chronically ill patients by creating a treatment room that's also a negative pressure room.

Make us part of your solution team

Your dental practice can use the RECIRCULATOR II in two ways:

Air Purification

Hospital grade Filtering

Use in:

NO SETUP REQUIRED

Negative Pressure Room

cleans & prevents spread

Use in:

Do you want to see how the RECIRCULATOR II looks in action? Watch this video review!

Plan your strategy

Let’s break it down to exactly what you need to do next

I just need to clean the air

  1. Determine how many RECIRCULATOR II devices you need. Generally you only need one device per treatment room. The RECIRCULATOR II generates approximately 22 air changes per hour for a room with dimensions of 13’ x 15’ x 8’ (such as a treatment room or small bedroom).
  2. Decide where you will place the device(s). We recommend you place the RECIRCULATOR  II device on the opposite end of the doorway with the patient/occupants in between the doorway and the RECIRCULATOR II device.
  3. If you only need one RECIRCULATOR II, purchase it here and select the RECIRCULATOR II Only option. Or, call us at (800) 941-2844. If you need more than one device, please call or email to place your order.

Provide peace of mind while they wait

I need a negative pressure room

  1. Determine how many negative pressure rooms you need. Having a negative pressure room can be a benefit to you, your staff, and your patients. A negative pressure room is designed to capture external respiration and filter it through the RECIRCULATOR II before the air escapes through doorways or sources of ventilation. This minimizes the risk to non-ill individuals who could inhale air from symptomatic and non-symptomatic individuals carrying a disease.
  2. Decide how you will install the RECIRCULATOR II device. First you need to have the Negative Pressure Adapter attachment and an 8-inch flexible hose. With the hose and attachment connected to the machine, vent the hose through a ventilation source. Examples:
    -You can place the Recirculator II device near a partitioned window and connect the hose to it like you would a home A/C unit.
    -You can use the hose to connect to a dedicated exhaust.
    -You can vent the hose through a hole in the wall with a flapper valve like a home dryer unit.
  3. If you only need one RECIRCULATOR II, purchase it here and select the RECIRCULATOR II with Negative Pressure Adapter option. Or, call us at (800) 941-2844. If you need more than one device, please call or email to place your order.

If you have questions, see our Technical Support page or contact us directly.

What the experts are telling you

Minimum air changes per hour (ACH) requirements: outpatient surgical operating = 20 ACH; procedure rooms = 15 ACH

CDC Recommendation: “Consider the use of a portable HEPA air filtration unit, especially during and immediately following an aerosol-generating procedure.”

“Ensure appropriate air-handling systems are installed and maintained in healthcare facilities.”

Get the RECIRCULATOR II and problem solved!

Scroll to Top