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1.
Sustain Cities Soc ; 72: 103051, 2021 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34099968

ABSTRACT

With the arrival of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, the scientific academia, as well as policymakers, are striving to conceive solutions as an attempt to contain the spreading of contagion. Among the adopted measures, severe lockdown restrictions were issued to avoid the diffusion of the virus in an uncontrolled way through public spaces. It can be deduced from recent literature that the primary route of transmission is via aerosols, produced mainly in poorly ventilated interior areas where infected people spend a lot of time with other people. Concerning contagion rates, accumulated incidence or number of hospitalizations due to COVID-19, Spain, and Italy have reached very high levels. In this framework, a regression analysis to assess the feasibility of the indoor ventilation measures established in Spain and Italy, with respect to the European framework, is here presented. To this aim, ten cases of housing typology were and analyzed. The results show that the measures established in the applicable regulations to prevent and control the risk of contagion by aerosols are not adequate to guarantee a healthy environment indoors. The current Italian guidelines are more restrictive than in Spain, yet the ventilation levels are still insufficient in times of pandemic.

2.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ; 27(19): 23464-23476, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31264156

ABSTRACT

The present work is aimed at analyzing the performance of the commercial filters used for the mechanical filtration of suspended solid particles. In particular, it is intended to evaluate the head losses due to the presence of the filter in the plant and how these losses vary depending on the circulating flow rate, the nominal porosity of the filter, and its clogging degree. Filters with interstices of different sizes, from 1 to 50 µm, were compared for the performance analysis. The polypropylene wire, in facts, wrapped around a windowed cylinder of the same material, allows the creation of meshes with the desired degree of compactness. The experiments were carried out at the Laboratory of Environmental and Maritime Hydraulics (LIDAM) in a hydraulic circuit reproducing a domestic piping system, where different water demand scenarios were analyzed. The clogging of the cartridge was made with the aid of sand particles, attached, with the help of a natural glue, to the external surface of the filter. More than 200 measurements were carried out, which showed a clear increasing trend of the head losses at the filter as the clogging degree and the circulating flow rate increase. In all cases, the trend of the pressure drop at the filter has a more than linear trend. Also, it was observed that head losses did not exhibit a marked dependence on the nominal porosity. Best performances in terms of minor head losses were obtained by the 50-µm filter.


Subject(s)
Filtration , Water Purification , Porosity , Water
3.
Data Brief ; 22: 296-306, 2019 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30591948

ABSTRACT

The data provided here refers to the experimental laboratory investigation conducted in the Laboratory of Environmental and Maritime Hydraulics (LIDAM) of University of Salerno, Italy, with the aim of developing a new filtering cartridge for water treatment capable of overcoming the main inconveniences shown by usual commercial cartridges. Specifically, the proposed filtering cartridge is an economic, non-toxic, low-resistance and long-life cartridge, currently under a patent pending status, whose main advantage is to permit to significantly reduce, compared with the commercial cartridges, average head losses induced by the cartridge even for high clogging degrees, and to increase, as a consequence, the life cycle of the cartridges. In this article a collection of pictures is provided, showing the different filters progressively tested in the laboratory, also in sand clogging conditions, until finding the optimal solution. Pictures of the laboratory equipment, with adopted materials and instrumentation, are also given. Finally, tables with the values of the local pressure drops at the cartridge in the different test conditions are provided. The data is related to "A new cost effective, long life and low resistance filter cartridge for water treatment" [1].

4.
J Environ Sci (China) ; 69: 95-104, 2018 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29941273

ABSTRACT

The fate of indigenous surface-water and wastewater antibiotic resistant bacteria in a mild slope stream simulated through a hydraulic channel was investigated in outdoor experiments. The effect of (i) natural (dark) decay, (ii) sunlight, (iii) cloudy cover, (iv) adsorption to the sediment, (v) hydraulic conditions, (vi) discharge of urban wastewater treatment plant (UWTP) effluent and (vii) bacterial species (presumptive Escherichia coli and enterococci) was evaluated. Half-life time (T1/2) of E. coli under sunlight was in the range 6.48-27.7min (initial bacterial concentration of 105CFU/mL) depending on hydraulic and sunlight conditions. E. coli inactivation was quite similar in sunny and cloudy day experiments in the early 2hr, despite of the light intensity gradient was in the range of 15-59W/m2; but subsequently the inactivation rate decreased in the cloudy day experiment (T1/2=23.0min) compared to sunny day (T1/2=17.4min). The adsorption of bacterial cells to the sediment (biofilm) increased in the first hour and then was quite stable for the remaining experimental time. Finally, when the discharge of an UWTP effluent in the stream was simulated, the proportion of indigenous antibiotic resistant E. coli and enterococci was found to increase as the exposure time increased, thus showing a higher resistance to solar inactivation compared to the respective total populations.


Subject(s)
Bacteria , Drug Resistance, Bacterial/genetics , Wastewater/microbiology , Biofilms , Enterococcus , Escherichia coli , Rivers/microbiology , Water Microbiology
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