| Literature DB >> 32643925 |
Tianqi Zhang, Ting Wang, Benjamin Mejia-Tickner, Jessica R Kissel, Xing Xie, Ching-Hua Huang.
Abstract
Peracetic acid (PAA) is an emerging disinfectant for municipal wastewater treatment owing to good biocidal effects and limited harmful by-products formation. This study investigated the inactivation of gram-negative Escherichia coli, and gram-positive Enterococcus durans and Staphylococcus epidermidis by PAA combined with UV concurrently (UV/PAA) or sequentially (PAA-UV/PAA) for enhanced disinfection. Under UV/PAA, the contributions of different mechanisms (UV, PAA, reactive radicals (mainly •OH and CH3C(O)OO•), and the synergistic effect of all mechanisms involved) to the overall inactivation were quantitatively assessed. Results revealed that radicals played a moderate role in the enhanced disinfection, while the synergistic effect presented a greater contribution which could be partially linked to the diffusion of PAA into the cells, as evidenced for the first time by a fluorescence microscopic method. Taking advantage of PAA diffusion into bacteria, pre-exposure of PAA followed by UV/PAA was demonstrated to yield the highest disinfection efficiency. Indeed, compared to UV/PAA, PAA-UV/PAA could achieve additional 4.7-5.4, 4.1-5.3, and 2.9-3.4 log inactivation of E. coli, E. durans, and S. epidermidis, respectively, in clean water and secondary/tertiary wastewater effluents when the same amounts of PAA and UV doses were applied in both approaches. Bacterial regrowth tests confirmed minimal regrowth potential after the disinfection.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32643925 DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c02424
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 9.028