Indoor Air Quality & Probiotic Science
Most people spend over 90% of their time indoors. Yet indoor air can be two to five times more polluted than outdoor air. The science of indoor environmental health is evolving fast. This center brings together everything we know about allergen biology, the indoor microbiome, and probiotic purification.
Start Here: The Foundations
These three guides cover the core science and give you the clearest picture of how indoor air quality actually works and what you can do about it.
What Is Probiotic Air Purification?
The complete guide to how probiotic purifiers work, what they eliminate, how they compare to HEPA filtration, and what the independent research says.
Best for: Anyone new to probiotic purification or comparing it to conventional air purifiers.
Read the guideHow to Reduce Mold and Allergens Naturally
A practical, science-backed guide to reducing dust mites, mold spores, pet dander, and indoor pathogens. Covers environmental strategies and biological approaches.
Best for: Allergy and asthma sufferers, pet owners, and anyone dealing with recurring mold.
Read the guideHow EnviroBiotics Works
A detailed explanation of the competitive exclusion mechanism, the Bacillus strains used, how surface settlement works, and why continuous dispersal outperforms periodic treatment.
Best for: Anyone who wants to understand the biology before making a purchase decision.
Read the guideThe Science of the Indoor Microbiome
The indoor microbiome is one of the most important and least understood aspects of home health. These guides cover what it is, why it matters, and how modern living has disrupted it.
What Is the Indoor Microbiome?
Your home has its own microbial ecosystem. Modern building practices, chemical cleaning habits, and reduced contact with nature have depleted it in ways that correlate with rising rates of allergies, asthma, and inflammatory disease.
Coming soonThe Hygiene Hypothesis Explained
The hygiene hypothesis proposes that reduced exposure to beneficial environmental microbes is disrupting immune system development. Here is what the research actually says and what it means for how you manage your home.
Coming soonAllergens and Health
Dust Mite Allergens
Dust mite waste proteins are among the most common triggers for indoor allergies and asthma. This guide covers the biology, why conventional approaches fall short, and what independent testing shows about probiotic reduction of Der p1 and Der f1.
Coming soonMold Indoors
Mold grows inside walls, beneath flooring, inside HVAC systems, and in dozens of hidden locations that cleaning products cannot reach. This guide covers mold biology, conditions that allow it to thrive, and effective prevention strategies.
Coming soonPet Dander
Fel d1 and Can f1 are two of the stickiest, most persistent indoor allergens. They cling to surfaces for months. This guide explains why conventional approaches provide limited relief and how enzymatic probiotic degradation addresses pet allergens at the molecular level.
Coming soonProbiotic Purification Science
The Science of Competitive Exclusion
Competitive exclusion is the core mechanism behind probiotic purification. Learn how beneficial Bacillus strains compete with harmful organisms for resources and space, and what the peer-reviewed research says.
Coming soonUnderstanding FDA GRAS Certification
GRAS is the FDA's highest safety designation for microorganisms. This guide explains what it means, how it is evaluated, and why it is the key safety standard to look for in any probiotic air purification product.
Coming soonProbiotic vs. Chemical Disinfection
A comparison of long-term outcomes between probiotic surface treatment and conventional chemical disinfection, drawing on hospital hygiene research including the Robert Koch Institute guidelines.
Coming soonComparisons
Designed for people actively evaluating air purification options who want an honest, science-based comparison.
EnviroBiotics vs. HEPA Air Purifiers
How probiotic purification and HEPA filtration differ, where each performs best, and why combining both provides the most comprehensive indoor air quality solution.
Read the comparisonEnviroBiotics vs. UV-C Purifiers
UV-C light kills organisms that pass through it but has no effect on surface contamination. This guide compares the two technologies across the most important performance dimensions.
Read the comparisonEnviroBiotics vs. Chemical Fresheners
Chemical fresheners mask odors and provide one-time antimicrobial action. Probiotic purification eliminates the source of both odors and contamination continuously.
Read the comparisonProof and Research
Independent Studies and Lab Results
The research behind EnviroBiotics, including the Indoor Biotechnologies study showing up to 90% allergen reduction, toxicological safety assessments, and third-party performance testing.
Read the researchCertifications Explained
What FDA GRAS, EPA registration, MADE SAFE certification, and Allergy UK endorsement actually mean, how each is evaluated, and why they matter.
Read the guideCase Studies
Real outcomes from households, offices, HVAC facilities, and healthcare environments that have used EnviroBiotics technology.
Read the case studiesFrequently Asked Questions
Stay Informed
New guides, research summaries, and product updates are added regularly. If you have a question that is not answered here, visit the FAQ or contact the EnviroBiotics support team.
Contact us with questionsScience-backed purification for your home.
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Content in the EnviroBiotics Education Center is written and reviewed by the EnviroBiotics Science Team. All claims are supported by independent laboratory research or peer-reviewed scientific literature. All EnviroBiotics probiotic strains are FDA GRAS certified, EPA registered, and MADE SAFE certified. Independent lab testing conducted by Indoor Biotechnologies. Results may vary based on space size, environmental conditions, and continuous device operation. Last updated April 2025.


