Making hand sanitizer to fight corona virus

What is hand sanitizer made of, or how you can efficiently disinfect your hands or other frequently touched surfaces like doorknobs? Handwashing is still the best way to keep your hands clean, but hand sanitizer is a great alternative for situations where clean water and soap are not available, and you can even use it to disinfect surfaces!

 

  • Measuring cups and spoons
  • Pot to mix all ingredients
  • Spoon
  • Dishwashing soap
  • Water
  • Bleach (unscented)
  • Funnel
Recipe 1:
  • Isopropyl alcohol, with a concentration of 90% or higher
  • Aloe Vera gel, available online at Amazon.com
  • Clean bottle or tube to store the sanitizer, preferably with flip top.
  • Optional: essential oil with a pleasant scent, available online at Amazon.com
Recipe 2:
  • Isopropyl alcohol, with a concentration of 70% or higher
  • Glycerol or glycerin, available online at Amazon.com
  • Hydrogen peroxide, 3%
  • Distilled water, available online at Amazon.com, or water that has been boiled for at least 1 minute (at sea-level) to 3 minutes (high altitude) and cooled to room temperature
  • Clean spray bottle
  • Optional: essential oil with a pleasant scent, available online at Amazon.com
    The materials needed to make hand sanitizer at home

Prep Work

  1. Before you start, you need to disinfect all the tools you will use.
    1. Start by washing the tools in warm soapy water.
    2. Rinse with clean water.
    3. Make a disinfecting solution by mixing one tablespoon of bleach in one gallon of room temperature (not hot!) water. Bleach is a good disinfectant; it kills most germs.
    4. Dunk the tools in your sanitizing solution. For an extra safety measure, you can dunk the ingredient bottles too.
    5. Let the tools air-dry on a clean and disinfected drying rack.
  2. Wash your hands well just before you start the activity and disinfect your workspace.

Procedure

Recipe 1: Make a gel.
  1. This recipe is quick and easy and requires very few ingredients.
  2. Mix three parts isopropyl alcohol to one part aloe gel in a clean pot with a clean measuring spoon. For example, you can mix 1 cup of isopropyl alcohol with 1/3 cup of aloe gel, or 3 cups of isopropyl alcohol with 1 cup of aloe gel.
    Think about:
    If you could have used isopropyl alcohol with a concentration of 100%, and your aloe gel didn’t contain any alcohol, what alcohol concentration would this mixture have had? (Hint: first calculate the total amount of solution, then calculate what fraction of the total is alcohol, and finish by converting this fraction to a percentage. Answer: 3/4 or 75%)
  3. If your isopropyl alcohol has a concentration 90% or higher, your solution will have a concentration of 68.5% or higher. The CDC (Center for Disease Control) states that hand sanitizers with an alcohol concentration below 60% are less effective at killing germs.
  4. Optional: To give your sanitizer a more pleasing scent, you can add a few drops of essential oil.
  5. Pour the mixture into a clean bottle. Close the bottle well.
  6. Let your hand sanitizer sit for at least 3 days before using it.
  7. When you start using the sanitizer, make sure to close the bottle after each use and avoid touching the mouth of the bottle when applying the sanitizer.
Recipe 2: Make a spray.
  1. This recipe is easy to make but requires a few more ingredients.
  2. Pour 1 and 2/3 cups of isopropyl alcohol in a large clean pot. Remember to use clean utensils!
    2/3 cups of isopropyl alcohol being added to a clear solution
  3. Find the alcohol concentration on the bottle of isopropyl alcohol’s label.
    1. If the isopropyl alcohol solution is ≥ 90%, mix in 1/4 cup of distilled or boiled and cooled water.
    2. If the isopropyl alcohol solution is < 90%, add another 1/4 cup of alcohol.
    Think about:
    Can you think of a reason why the recipe calls for adding water when using a high concentration alcohol solution? Why do you think the water needs to be distilled or boiled and cooled?
    Illustration of Isopropyl Alcohol labels with the alcohol concentration circled.
  4. According to the CDC (Center for Decease Control), the concentration of alcohol in a hand sanitizer needs to be 60% or more.
    Think about:
    If you could have used isopropyl alcohol with a concentration of 100%, can you calculate what the concentration of the alcohol would be in the solution you just made? (Hint: first calculate the total amount of solution, then calculate what fraction of the total is alcohol, and finish by converting this fraction to a percentage. Answer: 20/23 or 87%)
  5. For an alcohol concentration of 90% or more, your current mixture has an alcohol concentration of 78% or more, well above the 60% required.
  6. Mix in 1 tablespoon of hydrogen peroxide. This ingredient will inactivate bacterial spores.
    The label of hydrogen peroxide topical solution
  7. Use a clean spoon to pour a small amount of the current mixture on your hands. Rub it in.
  8. Use a clean teaspoon to add 2 teaspoons of glycerol to the mixture. When you are done, take a little of the glycerol on your hand and rub it on. (If glycerol or glycerin is not available, moisturize your hands after every use of the sanitizer.)
    A tablespoon of glycerin being added to a clear solution
  9. Optional: To give your sanitizer a more pleasing scent, you can add a few drops of essential oil.
  10. Pour the mixture into a clean spray bottle. Close the bottle well.
    A funnel helps transfer the solution to the bottle
  11. Let your hand sanitizer sit for at least 3 days before using it.
  12. When you start using the sanitizer, avoid touching the nozzle when applying the sanitizer. If you need to touch it, wash your hands first.
    W
  13. To effectively sanitize your hands, spray it on, rub it around so every part of your hand gets disinfected, and let your hands air dry.
  14. To sanitize a surface with this spray: spray it on, let it sit a little and if needed, dry off. You can also use it to create disinfecting wipes.
    What surfaces do you think might collect germs?

What Happened?

If you followed the directions, the concentration of your sanitizer is well within the requirements for alcohol-based sanitizers: an alcohol concentration above 60% and a 10 to 40% concentration of purified water. The alcohol helps kill germs, but water is needed to make the solution effective. Water makes it better at killing germs.

The alcohol solution probably felt cold on your hands because it uses the warmth of your hands to evaporate. It dries out the skin in the process. Glycerol (also called glycerin) is mainly added to keep your hands from drying out too quickly.

It is advised to let homemade sanitizer sit for three days before starting to use it so any harmful germs that accidentally made it into the hand sanitizer will be dead by the time you use the sanitizer. You need to close the bottle after each use for two reasons: it prevents the alcohol in the sanitizer from evaporating so the spray’s potency will last longer, and it prevents airborne pathogens from entering the bottle. To keep the bottle clean and free of germs, you should not touch the mouth of the bottle or nozzle with unsanitized hands.

Frequently touched hard surfaces like doorknobs, elevator knobs, bathroom faucets, the remote control, phones and tables are often touched by a multiple of people. These are good surfaces to disinfect regularly.