Issue 3, 2022

Mechanisms of Escherichia coli inactivation during solar-driven photothermal disinfection

Abstract

Traditional solar water disinfection has low efficiency. Solar-to-heat converting nanomaterials enable the synergy of solar radiation and heat to kill water-borne bacteria. Herein, we explored the mechanism of bacterial inactivation using a solar disinfection reactor based on a carbon nanotube film that converts solar energy to heat. The photothermal reactor showed synergistic enhancement of E. coli inactivation with an efficiency of >5 log inactivation in 20 min under static conditions. The same bactericidal performance can be achieved under continuous flow conditions with a hydraulic retention time of 20 min. Compared with either solar radiation or heat alone, the solar photothermal disinfection treatment induced 2-fold accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and 40% higher inactivation of catalase and superoxide dismutase. Photo-induced heat was critical in bacterial inactivation. Transcriptomic analysis showed that the synergy of solar radiation and photo-induced heat disrupted the bacterial response to heat stress. Several metabolic pathways related to ROS generation that should be down-regulated by heat stress remained unchanged in sunlight, but the expression of safA (promoting the expression of the gene encoding catalase) was blocked by sunlight, causing the accumulation of ROS. The massive amount of ROS attacked cell membranes and RNA and finally resulted in cell death. This method provides a possible alternative for drinking and reclaimed water disinfection with high efficiency, low energy consumption and no toxic by-products.

Graphical abstract: Mechanisms of Escherichia coli inactivation during solar-driven photothermal disinfection

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
31 Oct 2021
Accepted
20 Jan 2022
First published
25 Jan 2022

Environ. Sci.: Nano, 2022,9, 1000-1010

Mechanisms of Escherichia coli inactivation during solar-driven photothermal disinfection

Y. Hong, W. Shi, H. Wang, D. Ma, Y. Ren, Y. Wang, Q. Li and B. Gao, Environ. Sci.: Nano, 2022, 9, 1000 DOI: 10.1039/D1EN00999K

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