The present invention involves the use of photosensitizers to provide antibacterial
surfaces on consumer and industrial items. This approach avoids the used of chemicals
and solutions that may be toxic. The inventions also avoids the use of chemical
compositions that might form degradation products which may be unacceptable to
healthy persons or irritating to persons who may have allergies or are otherwise
sensitized. According to the invention, photosensitizers with specific properties
and specific design features are selected to make practical use of photosensitizers
in the consumer and industrial market place. It is important to select a photosensitizer
with an activation spectrum that is matched to the environmental conditions under
which the surface to be protected is required to exhibit its antimicrobial properties.
This means that the illumination energy and intensity levels expected need to yield
enough singlet oxygen to destroy the targeted microbes. It is also possible to
select photosensitizers that are activated only by wavelengths prominently present
in certain illumination lamps, such as those lamps commonly present in a laboratories,
medical offices, pharmacies and food service areas, thereby making the surfaces
antimicrobial only on demand when the illumination lamps are turned on.