Science
Ozone Machines vs. OdorBlitz: What Science Says Actually neutralizes Odors
Both promise odor neutralization. Only one actually delivers — without damaging your car, seals, or electronics. Here's the head-to-head breakdown.
Tips, Science & Guides
Expert guides on chlorine dioxide, odor neutralization, and keeping your home & car smelling clean.
Science
Both promise odor neutralization. Only one actually delivers — without damaging your car, seals, or electronics. Here's the head-to-head breakdown.
Car Care
Sprays, ozone, baking soda, steam — we ran them all. Here's exactly what happened, and why OdorBlitz is the only thing that truly neutralized the smell.
Science
Chlorine dioxide has been used in water treatment and professional remediation for decades. Here's the exact science behind why it neutralizes odors at the molecular level.
Pet Care
Enzyme cleaners tackle the stain. Air fresheners tackle your nose. OdorBlitz tackles the actual odor molecules — including the ones hiding in your walls and subfloor.
Home
You cleaned the mold. Bleached the surface. So why does it still smell? The answer is mycotoxins — and only OdorBlitz reaches them where they live.
Tips
Cooking, gym gear, basement damp, garbage bins, and musty RVs — five odor categories that routinely defeat conventional products, and exactly how OdorBlitz handles each.
Guides
From studio apartments to large garages and vehicle interiors — the complete setup, activation, and ventilation guide so your first OdorBlitz treatment gets maximum results.
Products
The Air Relief Pod releases a low-level ClO₂ dose around the clock. Learn the best placement tips for maximum coverage in rooms, closets, and vehicles.
Home
Musty front-loader smell is one of the most common complaints we hear. Standard cleaning tablets barely help. Here's why OdorBlitz works where they don't.
Home
Deodorizer discs. Baking soda. Vinegar rinses. We've heard it all — and none of it truly neutralizes ammonia. Here's the one treatment that actually neutralizes diaper pail odor.
Home
Closets trap humidity, old shoes, and stale air into a perfect storm of odor. We show you how to deeply deodorize any closet — not just mask the smell for a few days.
Car Care
Air fresheners are band-aids. Detailing sprays last days. This guide covers why ClO₂ tablets are what professional detailers now use first — and the exact protocol to follow.
Car Care
Steam lifts dirt and bacteria. OdorBlitz neutralizes the odor compounds left behind. Together, they're the before-and-after that gets cars sold — and customers calling back.
Tips
Chlorine dioxide is powerful — and that means using it wrong leads to wasted product and disappointing results. Here are the six most common mistakes our customers make, fixed.
Tips
Sweat, bacteria, and synthetic fabric make gym bags a perfect odor breeding ground. Washing helps — but only OdorBlitz gas reaches into every fiber, seam, and zipper pocket.
Home
Cooking fish, frying garlic, or making curry can leave your kitchen reeking for days. Here's why ventilation alone never fully works — and how one OdorBlitz treatment resets everything.
Car Care
RVs hold onto smoke, pet, mildew, and holding-tank smells in an intensely enclosed space. This is the complete pro guide to getting your camper genuinely fresh — not just sprayed.
Both sound scientific. One actually works. We break down the real difference between ozone treatment and ClO₂ — and why professionals are switching.
When you search "how to remove odors effectively," two technologies come up again and again: ozone (O₃) and chlorine dioxide (ClO₂). Both are used by professional restoration companies. Both produce impressive-sounding results. But they work in fundamentally different ways — and one has a clear edge for home and vehicle use.
Ozone generators pump a high concentration of O₃ into a space. This unstable molecule oxidizes odor compounds on contact, breaking them apart. The problem? Ozone at effective concentrations is dangerous to breathe. People, pets, and houseplants must be removed. Ozone also degrades rubber seals, fabrics, and electronics over time with repeated use.
ClO₂ is a selective oxidizer. It targets the specific molecules responsible for odor — sulfur compounds, amines, mercaptans — without attacking materials the way ozone does. It penetrates porous surfaces where odors hide: carpet fibers, upholstery foam, drywall.
For regular use in homes, cars, and everyday spaces, chlorine dioxide is safer, more material-friendly, and at least as effective — often more so on organic odors like pet urine and mold. It's why OdorBlitz chose ClO₂ as its core technology.
Cigarette and wildfire smoke embeds itself into every surface. Here's the effective method that actually neutralizes it at the molecular level — not just masks it.
Smoke odor is one of the hardest smells to get out of a car. It gets into the headliner, seatbelt webbing, HVAC vents, carpet backing, and foam cushioning — places that sprays and wipes never reach. Most people try air fresheners, which simply layer a new smell on top.
Smoke particles are microscopic and sticky. When you smoke inside a vehicle, those particles bond to every fabric and porous surface. The compounds responsible — polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, acetaldehyde, nicotine residue — are chemically active and don't just evaporate on their own.
Close all windows and doors. Place an OdorBlitz 1 Room Kit or Bubbler on the center console with the HVAC set to recirculate at low fan speed. Activate the tablet. Leave the vehicle sealed for 2–3 hours. Ventilate afterward by opening all doors for 15 minutes.
Heavy smoker vehicles may need two treatments spaced 48 hours apart. After the second treatment, most customers report a significant reduction in smoke odor with no chemical smell left behind.
Chlorine dioxide has been used in water treatment and professional remediation for decades. Here's the exact science behind why it neutralizes odors at the molecular level.
OdorBlitz uses chlorine dioxide (ClO₂) as its active ingredient — the same compound used in municipal water treatment, food safety sanitation, and medical facility decontamination.
Most air fresheners work by releasing fragrance molecules that overwhelm your nose's ability to detect bad smells. ClO₂ does something different: it chemically reacts with odor-causing molecules and converts them into odorless compounds. The smell isn't covered — it's neutralized.
Unlike bleach or ozone, ClO₂ is selective in what it reacts with. It strongly targets reduced sulfur compounds, amines (fish, decay, body odor), and organic volatile compounds — the core categories behind virtually every unpleasant indoor odor.
OdorBlitz tablets generate ClO₂ in gas form. Gas penetrates where liquids and sprays cannot: inside foam cushions, behind baseboards, through HVAC ducts.
Enzymatic sprays help. Air fresheners hide it. But if you want to effectively neutralize pet urine, dander, and wet-dog smell at the source — you need ClO₂.
If you have pets, you know the cycle: clean, treat with enzymatic spray, let dry, and two weeks later the smell is back. Here's why that happens — and what actually breaks the cycle.
Enzymatic cleaners are excellent at breaking down urine proteins on hard surfaces and the top layer of carpet. What they can't do is penetrate into the carpet backing and subfloor — which is where the odor lives long-term.
Dander is airborne and circulates through your HVAC system constantly. Air purifiers help, but they don't address odor compounds already embedded in ductwork and filters. A gaseous treatment that travels through the HVAC system addresses this directly.
Run a 1 Room Kit treatment with your HVAC fan on (set to recirculate). This pushes ClO₂ gas through your ductwork, treating the entire air system along with the room.
You cleaned the mold. So why does it still smell? The answer is mycotoxins — and they require more than bleach to neutralize.
You scrubbed the wall. You used bleach. The mold is gone — visually. But the smell? Still there two weeks later. Here's the science behind why.
Mold produces microbial volatile organic compounds (MVOCs) as metabolic byproducts. Even after you kill the visible mold colony, MVOC residues remain embedded in porous materials — drywall, insulation, wood framing — and continue off-gassing. Bleach kills surface mold but doesn't penetrate deep enough to neutralize embedded MVOCs.
In humid conditions, even killed mold leaves behind spores that can reactivate. The odor can seem to "return" even if it's technically continuous.
Chlorine dioxide is highly effective at oxidizing MVOCs. It also has antifungal properties that can reduce spore viability on surfaces it contacts. Address the moisture source first, then treat with OdorBlitz to help reduce lingering odors.
Cooking, gym gear, basement damp, garbage bins, and musty RVs — discover the five odor categories that regularly defeat conventional products.
Chlorine dioxide is one of the most versatile odor-neutralization tools available. Here are five types of odors where ClO₂ consistently outperforms everything else.
Fish and curry smells cling to fabric, paint, and HVAC systems for days or weeks. ClO₂ neutralizes the amine compounds responsible and clears the air in a single treatment.
Sweat odor is driven by bacteria metabolizing skin secretions. A ClO₂ treatment inside a sealed bag or locker neutralizes both the bacteria and the volatile compounds they produce.
That underground, earthy smell in basements comes from mold, bacteria, and soil gases. ClO₂ gas penetrates every corner and crevice — places a spray bottle will never reach.
A single treatment inside a sealed bin neutralizes the biofilm layer that causes recurring odor. Use the Air Relief Pod nearby for ongoing maintenance.
Closed-up RVs and boats accumulate a distinctive musty, diesel-mixed odor. ClO₂ gas treats the entire interior volume in a single session.
Follow these steps correctly and you'll get the best result every time — whether it's a bedroom, car, basement, or closet.
OdorBlitz is straightforward to use, but following the steps correctly makes the difference between a good result and a great one.
Remove people and pets from the space. Close windows and doors. Set HVAC or car ventilation to recirculate (fan on, no fresh air intake).
Place the OdorBlitz Kit in the center of the space — middle of the room, or center console in a vehicle. Add the activator liquid to the tablet chamber as directed. ClO₂ generation begins within a few minutes.
For light odors: 1–2 hours. For moderate odors (smoke, pets): 2–4 hours. For severe odors (fire damage, long-term pet use): 4–8 hours, or a second treatment after 48 hours.
Open all windows and doors for 15–30 minutes. The faint bleach-like smell dissipates quickly. Within an hour, the space will smell noticeably fresher and cleaner.
A slow-release ClO₂ pod that maintains freshness for up to 30 days. Perfect for closets, cars, nurseries, and anywhere ongoing odor control is needed.
The Air Relief Pod is OdorBlitz's continuous-release product — designed to maintain freshness between deep treatments or as a standalone solution for smaller spaces.
The Air Relief Pod contains a ClO₂-generating compound sealed in a breathable membrane. At room temperature, it releases a very low, consistent level of ClO₂ gas for up to 30 days — ideal for preventing odors from building up.
In a room: place near the odor source or in the center. In a closet: hang or place on a shelf at head height. In a vehicle: place under the driver or passenger seat. Avoid placing inside enclosed boxes — the pod needs airflow to work correctly.
Use a full OdorBlitz kit for existing strong odors. Use the Air Relief Pod as follow-up maintenance once the major odor is neutralized.
Your washer is supposed to clean things. So why does it smell? Here's exactly why it happens — and how to fix it at the source.
Your washing machine is supposed to clean things. So why does it smell like a gym locker? Front-load washers are notorious for developing a persistent mildew odor that gets transferred to freshly washed laundry.
Front-load washers have a rubber door gasket that traps water, detergent residue, and lint. That trapped moisture is a perfect breeding ground for mold and mildew. The drum can also harbor biofilm — a layer of bacteria that produces a distinct sour, musty smell.
Washing machine cleaning tablets help briefly. They remove some surface residue but don't penetrate the gasket folds or kill the mold behind the drum.
Run a hot empty cycle with a dissolved OdorBlitz tablet in the drum. The ClO₂ generated penetrates the gasket, drum walls, and any accessible internal components. Most users report a significant improvement in odor after a single treatment.
Baking soda and deodorizer discs don't cut it. Here's the method that effectively neutralizes diaper pail odor at the source.
Diaper pails are one of the worst odor problems in any household with a baby. The combination of ammonia from urine, bacterial breakdown compounds, and the warm enclosed environment creates an odor that nothing seems to effectively fix.
Baking soda neutralizes acid odors but does almost nothing to ammonia compounds or the bacterial biofilm that develops inside a diaper pail. Deodorizer discs release fragrance to mask the smell — fine when new, but fades within days.
Inside your diaper pail, bacteria form a biofilm layer on the walls and lid that continuously produces odor compounds. This biofilm makes the pail smell even when empty. Regular soap cleaning disrupts it but doesn't neutralize it — it regrows quickly.
Empty and rinse the pail. Place a partially activated OdorBlitz tablet inside the empty, closed pail for 1–2 hours. The ClO₂ gas fills the interior, penetrating the biofilm and neutralizing odor compounds.
Cedar blocks and sachets don't work. Here's how to actually deodorize a closet — at the molecular level, not just masked.
Closets are odor traps. Poor ventilation, humidity, old shoes, and synthetic fabrics create a layered smell that no amount of cedar blocks or dryer sheets can truly fix.
Most closet odors come from bacteria on old shoes and worn clothing, mold developing in corners due to humidity, off-gassing from older synthetic materials, and sometimes mothball residue. Each of these requires a different approach — which is why masking products fail.
Cedar blocks and sachets release aromatic compounds that partially mask the smell. They don't kill bacteria, don't neutralize mold VOCs, and don't penetrate the foam of old shoes.
Remove all clothing and items from the closet. Place a small OdorBlitz treatment inside the sealed closet. The ClO₂ gas fills every corner, penetrates the walls and floor, and neutralizes odor compounds across all surfaces. Most closets are transformed with a single 2-hour treatment.
If you've tried every spray and every detailing product and your car still smells — this guide is for you.
If you've tried every hanging air freshener, every spray, and every detailing product and your car still smells — this guide is for you. Here's the definitive breakdown of car odor neutralization.
Air fresheners work by masking odors with fragrance. This approach doesn't address embedded odors in fabric, foam, headliners, or HVAC systems. The moment the fragrance fades, the underlying smell is right back.
Enzyme-based sprays work well on biological odors if applied correctly. The limitation: they require direct contact with the odor source. Embedded odors in foam seats or HVAC ducts are simply unreachable with a spray bottle.
Professional detailers have adopted chlorine dioxide treatments for cars that won't come clean by other methods. ClO₂ generates as a gas and fills the vehicle's interior volume — reaching every seam, every duct, every piece of foam. One treatment can significantly reduce embedded odors in most vehicles.
Steam cleaning and chlorine dioxide treatment are two of the most effective individual tools for deodorizing. Used together, they're nearly unbeatable.
Steam cleaning and chlorine dioxide treatment are two of the most effective individual tools for car and home deodorizing. Used together in sequence, they're nearly unbeatable — the combination professional detailers rely on for vehicles with the worst odor problems.
High-temperature steam (above 200°F) kills bacteria and loosens bonded dirt, stains, and biological material from fabric and upholstery. It physically lifts the solid components of odor-causing matter from surfaces.
After steam treatment, the remaining odor is from volatile compounds embedded in the fibers and foam — compounds that steam cannot neutralize. This is exactly where ClO₂ excels.
Step 1: Steam clean all fabric surfaces and carpet. Allow to dry fully. Step 2: Close the vehicle, set HVAC to recirculate, and run an OdorBlitz treatment for 2–3 hours. Step 3: Ventilate for 15–30 minutes.
ClO₂ is powerful — but using it wrong produces disappointing results. These are the six most common mistakes and how to avoid them.
Chlorine dioxide is a genuinely powerful odor neutralization tool — but like any powerful tool, using it wrong produces disappointing results.
ClO₂ gas needs to build up to an effective concentration. If you run a treatment with windows cracked or HVAC bringing in fresh air, the gas dilutes too quickly to work. Always seal the space thoroughly before activating.
For light odors: 1–2 hours is sufficient. For anything moderate or above — smoke, pets, mold — plan for at least 4 hours. Cutting it short significantly reduces effectiveness.
Open all windows and doors for 15–30 minutes after treatment. The faint bleach-like smell you may notice immediately dissipates with ventilation.
Running the HVAC fan on recirculate during treatment pushes ClO₂ gas through your ductwork — treating one of the most overlooked sources of persistent household odor. Don't skip this step.
Washing alone can't fix gym bag odor. Here's the science of why — and the method that actually works.
Gym bags and sports equipment are odor nightmares. The combination of synthetic fabrics, tight seams, persistent moisture, and bacteria creates a smell that washing alone can't fix.
The odor from sweat is produced by bacteria that metabolize sweat compounds into volatile molecules. These bacteria colonize the seams and foam of gym bags where washing water doesn't fully penetrate.
Shin guards, boxing gloves, and hockey equipment accumulate bacterial colonies in dense foam padding that is nearly impossible to clean by conventional means.
Seal the gym bag or equipment inside a large plastic bin or garbage bag. Place a partially activated OdorBlitz tablet inside. Seal and leave for 2 hours. The ClO₂ gas penetrates every seam, layer of foam, and fabric weave — neutralizing odor compounds and killing the bacteria producing them.
Great on the plate, terrible for the next 48 hours. Here's why cooking odors stick around — and the effective method that truly resets your kitchen.
Cooking fish is one of the most divisive kitchen activities — great on the plate, terrible for the next 48 hours of ambient kitchen and home smell. The same applies to curry, garlic, and other strongly aromatic cooking.
Fish odor comes primarily from trimethylamine (TMA) — a nitrogen compound produced as fish proteins break down. It adheres strongly to fabrics, painted walls, and HVAC filters. Opening windows helps during cooking but does little about what's already bonded to your kitchen surfaces.
Scented candles and air fresheners mask TMA with fragrance but don't neutralize it. Vinegar and baking soda work slightly on contact surfaces but can't treat airborne or embedded compounds.
Run an OdorBlitz treatment in your kitchen and adjacent rooms after heavy cooking. The ClO₂ gas reacts with TMA and sulfur compounds, converting them to odorless compounds. A single treatment clears cooking odors throughout the home in 2 hours.
RVs are notorious for holding onto smoke, pet, mildew, and holding-tank smells. Here's the full pro guide to getting your camper smelling factory fresh.
RVs and camper vans are some of the hardest spaces to deodorize. A combination of holding tank smells, mold from moisture, previous occupants' smoke and pets, and cooking in confined spaces creates a layered odor problem that simple products don't touch.
Unlike a home, an RV has a holding tank directly beneath the living space. Even with vent stacks and tank treatments, hydrogen sulfide and other tank gases seep through seals and permeate the interior.
Empty and flush the holding tanks. Treat them with an enzyme-based holding tank treatment before your ClO₂ treatment. Remove perishables. Clean all surfaces. Address any visible mold first.
Close all vents and skylights. For a full-size RV, use multiple OdorBlitz Bulk Tablets distributed throughout — one in the sleeping area, one in the kitchen, one in the bathroom. Activate sequentially. Seal and leave for 4–6 hours. For smaller vans, a single 1 Room Kit is sufficient.
Ventilate thoroughly after treatment. Place an Air Relief Pod in the bathroom and one in the main living area for ongoing freshness. Before storing the RV for winter, run a full treatment to prevent mold from developing during storage.
Be the first to know about new products, restocks, and exclusive offers.