posted on 2023-08-15, 16:05authored byNiraj
Ashutosh Vidwans, Kathy Y. Rhee, Pushkar P. Lele, Sreeram Vaddiraju
The current methods used to study photocatalysis-assisted
water
disinfection at a laboratory scale may not lead to process scale-up
for large-scale implementation. These methods do not capture the process
complexity and address all the factors underlying disinfection kinetics,
including the physical characteristics (e.g., shape and size) of the
photocatalyst, the light intensity, the form of the catalyst (e.g.,
free-floating and immobilized), and the photocatalyst–microorganism
interaction mode (e.g., collision mode and constant contact mode).
This drawback can be overcome using in situ methods to track the interaction
between the photocatalysts and the microorganisms (e.g., Escherichia coli) and thereby engineering the resulting
disinfection kinetics. Contextually, this study employed microscopy
and particle-tracking algorithms to quantify in situ cell motility
of E. coli undergoing titanium dioxide
(TiO2) nanowire-assisted photocatalysis, which was observed
to correlate with cell viability closely. This experimentation also
informed that the E. coli bacterium
interacted with the photocatalysts through collisions (without sustained
contact), which allowed for phenomenological modeling of the observed
first-order kinetics of E. coli inactivation.
Addition of fluorescent-tagging assays to microscopy revealed that
cell membrane integrity loss is the primary mode of bacterial inactivation.
This methodology is independent of the microorganism or the photocatalyst
type and hence is expected to be beneficial for engineering disinfection
kinetics.