Inactivation by solar photo-Fenton in pet bottles of wild enteric bacteria of natural well water: Absence of re-growth after one week of subsequent storage
[Display omitted] ► Inactivation of wild enteric bacteria by near to neutral photo-Fenton. ► Evaluation of the photo-Fenton disinfection efficiency in natural well water. ► Description of the photo-Fenton disinfection mechanism at near to neutral pH. ► No bacterial regrowth observed after one week s...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied catalysis. B, Environmental Environmental, 2013-01, Vol.129, p.309-317 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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► Inactivation of wild enteric bacteria by near to neutral photo-Fenton. ► Evaluation of the photo-Fenton disinfection efficiency in natural well water. ► Description of the photo-Fenton disinfection mechanism at near to neutral pH. ► No bacterial regrowth observed after one week subsequent storage.
Iron photo-assisted inactivation of wild enteric bacteria (total coliforms/E. coli and Salmonella spp.) was carried out in water from the Sahelian wells having different pH (W1: 4.9 and W2: 6.3) and a natural iron content of 0.07mg/L. We evaluate the efficiency of the disinfection on different systems containing both or only one Fenton reagent (H2O2/Fe2+): (i) H2O2/Fe2+/hv, (ii) Fe2+/hv, (iii) H2O2/hv, and (iv) only light irradiation (hv) at lab and field scale. Generally, 0.6mg/L of Fe2+ and/or 8.5mg/L of H2O2 were used in the Fenton reagent. The systems H2O2/Fe2+/hv and H2O2/hv led to total inactivation of Salmonella and E. coli. The natural iron content (0.07mg/L) was enough to drive an efficient photo-Fenton process leading to total bacterial inactivation. Our results show that: (i) the iron salt present in Sahelian water is enough to perform a photo-Fenton disinfection of drinking water when adding H2O2, (ii) addition of external iron salts at near neutral pH has no additional effect on the bacterial photo-Fenton inactivation process. After one week of storage, no enteric bacteria re-growth was observed in treated waters. Mechanistic suggestions are presented to explain the observed results. |
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ISSN: | 0926-3373 1873-3883 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.apcatb.2012.09.016 |