Ok so to clarify, if I got something like the below linked ozone generator, you’re saying to run it ~2x a week for not very long at a low setting while monitoring the CO2 levels, turn it off, then wait 30mins until CO2 levels are normal, then the tVOCs should be at safe levels without having to constantly open/leave open my doors and and windows? I think it’s the ventilation in my apt though and clean air isn’t entering easily… my only concern would be O3 drifting into other apts at clouding at unsafe levels for them… and it would be tough to evacuate my whole floor lol… maybe UV is better? OR could I really generate at super low levels with the below and see it still work?
Posting a followup to this for anyone else asking the same question:
I purchased an ozone generator off of Amazon and ran a power cord through the door. I ran it twice, once in the passenger cabin (between the two front seats) and again in the trunk itself with the rear seats folded down.
Between runs, I opened all the doors and windows in the car and ran a box fan in to further ventilate the cabin. After the second run, I rolled down all the windows of the car and drove it around the neighborhood to further ventilate.
My car smells like ozone still but it's infinitely better than rotting meat and will fade over time.
Back in college, we used a Honeywell air purifier, with a HEPA filter and ionizer, and an ozone generator. That worked in a 170sqft dorm room. The Ozone will kill any smell, but it can be slightly toxic if inhaled in large doses, but so is smoke.
This is a different design than I had those many years ago, but as long as you place it close to the hookah, it should do the trick.
I can't tell you enough that you do not want to keep the ozone generator on for long. I can tell you that in a dorm room, the room smelled as clean as a hospital operating room in 5 minutes.