Deactivation of Legionella Pneumophila in municipal wastewater by ozone generated in arrays of microchannel plasmas

A greater than four log10 reduction in the concentration of Legionella pneumophila in municipal wastewater has been achieved in 1 min with ozone produced by a microchannel plasma reactor. Requiring less than 22 W of electrical power, and ambient air as the feedstock gas, the microplasma ozone genera...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of physics. D, Applied physics Applied physics, 2018-06, Vol.51 (25), p.255501
Hauptverfasser: Dong, Shengkun, Li, Jun, Kim, Min-Hwan, Cho, Jinhoon, Park, Sung-Jin, Nguyen, Thanh H, Eden, J Gary
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A greater than four log10 reduction in the concentration of Legionella pneumophila in municipal wastewater has been achieved in 1 min with ozone produced by a microchannel plasma reactor. Requiring less than 22 W of electrical power, and ambient air as the feedstock gas, the microplasma ozone generator is robust and a promising alternative to conventional corona and dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) technologies. Contrary to previous studies, the Ct model for pathogen deactivation (i.e. rate proportional to the product of the available disinfectant concentration and the exposure duration) is found to be valid for L. pneumophila. Accordingly, wastewater-specific Ct equations have been developed to predict the deactivation of L. pneumophila in the secondary wastewater environment. Inactivation of this pathogen was found to be dependent on temperature only in the absence of wastewater organic matter (WOM). In the presence of WOM, pathogen deactivation is controlled by the disinfection contact time, initial ozone concentration (varied between 15 and 281 µg l−1), and initial WOM loading. The data reported here will assist in the implementation of plasma ozone generators for L. pneumophila deactivation in cooling towers, point-of-use systems, and wastewater reclamation facilities.
ISSN:0022-3727
1361-6463
DOI:10.1088/1361-6463/aac379