Dry
carpet cleaning involves
the use of specialized machines to clean carpets
with recently developed chemical technologies that permit
no-moisture or "very low moisture" (VLM) cleaning, resulting
in carpet beautification, and removal of stains, dirt, grit,
sand, and allergens. The Institute
of Inspection, Cleaning, and Restoration Certification (IICRC)
is a nonprofit certifying body for the specialized fabric
cleaning industry that sets modern carpet cleaning standards;
it accepts three basic professional dry-cleaning methodologies.
Clean carpets are recognized by manufacturers as being more
visually pleasing, potentially longer-lasting and probably
healthier than poorly maintained carpets.
Carpet
cleaning is reportedly widely misunderstood, and chemical
developers have only within recent decades created new carpet
care technologies. Particularly, encapsulation and other
green technologies work better, are easier to use, require
less training, save more time and money, and lead to less
re-soiling than prior methods.
Processes
Dry
carpet cleaning systems are more accurately known as "very
low moisture" (VLM) systems, relying on dry compounds complemented
by application cleaning solutions, and are growing significantly
in market share due in part to their very rapid drying time,
a significant factor for 24-hour commercial installations.
Dry-cleaning and "very low moisture" systems are also often
faster and less labor-intensive than wet-extraction systems.
Pre-treatments,
pre-conditioners, or "traffic-lane cleaners", which are
detergents or emulsifiers that break the binding of soils
to carpet fibers over a short period of time, are commonly
sprayed onto carpet prior to the primary use of the dry-cleaning
system. One chemical dissolves the greasy films that bind
soils and prevent effective soil removal by vacuuming. The
solution may add a solvent like d-limonene,
petroleum
byproducts, glycol
ethers, or butyl
agents. The amount of time the pretreatment "dwells" in
the carpet should be less than 15 minutes, due to the thorough
carpet brushing common to these "very low moisture" systems,
which provides added agitation to ensure the pretreatment
works fully through the carpet.
Dry compound
An
absorbent, biodegradable
powder and cleaning compound may be spread evenly over carpet
and brushed or scrubbed in. For small areas, a household
hand brush can work such a compound into carpet pile; dirt
and grime is attracted to the compound, which is then vacuumed
off, leaving carpet immediately clean and dry. For commercial
applications, a specially designed cylindrical counter-rotating
brushing system is used, without a vacuum cleaner. Machine
scrubbing is more typical, in that hand scrubbing generally
cleans only the top third of carpet.
Encapsulation
In
the 1990s, new polymers
began literally encapsulating (crystallizing) soil particles
into dry residues on contact, in a process now regarded
by the industry as a growing, up-and-coming technology;
working like "tiny sponges", the deep-cleaning compound
crystals dissolve and absorb dirt prior to its removal from
the carpet.
Cleaning solution is applied by rotary machine, brush applicator,
or compression sprayer. Dry residue is vacuumable immediately,
either separately or from a built-in unit of the cleaning
system machine. According to ICS Cleaning Specialist,
evidence suggests encapsulation improves carpet appearance,
compared to other systems; and it is favorable in terms
of high-traffic needs, operator training, equipment expense,
and lack of wet residue.
Encapsulation also avoids the drying time of carpet shampoos,
making the carpet immediately available for use.
The
use of encapsulation to create a crystalline residue that
can be immediately vacuumed (as opposed to the dry powder
residue of wet-cleaning systems, which generally requires
an additional day before vacuuming) has recently become
an accepted method for commercial and residential carpet
maintenance.
Bonnet
After
club
soda mixed with cleaning product is deposited onto the
surface as mist, a round buffer or "bonnet" scrubs the mixture
with rotating motion. This industry machine resembles a
floor buffer, with an absorbent spin pad that attracts soil
and is rinsed or replaced repeatedly. The bonnet method
is not strictly dry-cleaning and involves significant drying
time, and usually only addresses the top third of carpet,
making it a quick solution rather than a deep cleaning of
dirt or odor as considered suitable for valuable carpet.
To reduce pile distortion, the absorbent pad should be kept
well-lubricated with cleaning solution.
A
D'Limolene based cleaner is pre-sprayed upon the carpet
to be cleaned. The product is given a dwell time of 5–10
minutes. The carpet is then extracted using an acid rinse
solution through a hot water extraction machine. Triple
dry strokes are then performed to ensure a low dry time.
While this process is not strictly dry cleaning and involves
a 1-4 hour dry time, it cleans deep into the fibers.
References