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1.
Water Res ; 229: 119399, 2023 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36462257

ABSTRACT

The widespread use of chlorination (Cl2) in drinking water systems causes the selection of chlorine-resistant bacteria commonly with dense extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) against chlorine permeation, posing significant threat to public health. Herein, a nanowire-assisted electroporation (EP) via locally enhanced electric field was combined with Cl2 to construct the synergistic EP/Cl2 disinfection, with the purposes of inducing cell pores for chlorine permeation and bacterial inactivation. The synergistic effects of EP/Cl2 were observed for inactivation of chlorine-resistant Bacillus cereus (G+, 304 µg DOC-EPS/109 CFU) and Aeromonas media (G-, 35.8 µg), and chlorine-sensitive Escherichia coli (G-, 5.1 µg) that were frequent occurrence in drinking water systems. The EP/Cl2 enabled above 6 log B. cereus inactivation (undetectable live bacteria) at 1.5 V-EP and 0.9 mg/L-Cl2, which was much higher than the individual EP (1.11 log) and Cl2 (1.13 log) disinfection. The cell membrane integrity, intracellular free chlorine levels, and morphology analyses revealed that the electroporation-induced pores on cell wall/membrane destructed the bound EPS barrier for chlorine permeation, and the pore sizes were further enlarged by chlorine oxidation, hence facilitating bacterial inactivation via destroying the cell structures. The excellent disinfection performance for tap water and lake water also suggested its sound application potentials.


Subject(s)
Disinfectants , Drinking Water , Nanowires , Water Purification , Chlorine/pharmacology , Halogenation , Extracellular Polymeric Substance Matrix , Disinfection , Bacteria , Electroporation , Escherichia coli , Disinfectants/pharmacology
2.
Water Res ; 207: 117825, 2021 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34763279

ABSTRACT

Still ∼10% of world's population has no sustainable access to centralized water supply system, causing millions of deaths annually by waterborne diseases. Here, we develop polypyrrole nanowire arrays (PPyNWs)-modified electrodes by polymerization of pyrrole on graphite felt for point-of-use water disinfection via low-voltage electroporation. A flow-through mode is specially applied to alleviate diffusion barrier of pyrrole in the porous graphite felt for uniform PPyNWs growth. The flow-through disinfection device using the optimized PPyNWs electrode achieves above 4-log removal for model virus (MS2) and gram-positive/negative bacteria (E. faecalis and E. coli) at applied voltage of 1.0 V and fluxes below 1000 and 2500 L/m2/h. Electroporation is recognized as the dominant disinfection mechanism by using square-wave alternating voltage of ±1.0 V to eliminate the electrochemical reactions. In-situ sampling experiments reveal that anode acts as the main disinfection function due to its electric field attraction with negatively charged E. coli cells. The live/dead baclight staining experiments indicate an adsorption-desorption process of E. coli cells on anode, and the adsorption-desorption balance determines the disinfection abilities of PPyNWs anode. Under 1.0 V and 2000 L/m2/h, the disinfection device enables above 4-log E. coli removal in tap water within 7-day operation with energy consumption below 20 mJ/L, suggesting its sound application potential for point-of-use water disinfection.


Subject(s)
Nanowires , Water Purification , Disinfection , Electrodes , Electroporation , Escherichia coli , Polymers , Pyrroles , Water
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