Combined Effect of Ultrasound and Ozone on ... - ACS Publications

May 16, 2015 - Results demonstrated that treatment with ozone alone (1 ... enhanced the inactivation to 99% after 4 min. A combined .... of bacterial ...
1 downloads 0 Views 1MB Size
Subscriber access provided by Yale University Library

Article

The combined effect of ultrasound and ozone on bacteria in water Amna Mohammed Al-hashimi, Timothy J. Mason, and Eadaoin Maria Joyce Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/es5045437 • Publication Date (Web): 16 May 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 18, 2015

Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.

Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.

Page 1 of 25

1 2

Environmental Science & Technology

The combined effect of ultrasound and ozone on bacteria in water

3

Amna M. Al-Hashimi, Timothy J. Mason and Eadaoin M. Joyce*

4 5

The Sonochemistry Centre, Coventry University, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Priory Street, Coventry, UK

6 7

Tel: +44 2476888075; Fax: +44 2476 888173; *Corresponding author email:[email protected]

8

Keyword: Ozone,ultrasound,water treatment, flow cytometry, Escherichia coli

9

*Corresponding author e-mail:[email protected]

10

Abstract ........................................................................................................................................... 2

11

Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 3

12

Material and methods ...................................................................................................................... 5

13

Preparation and viability assessment of bacterial suspensions ................................................... 5

14

Ultrasound and ozone system (USO3) ........................................................................................ 6

15

Transmission electron microscopy ............................................................................................. 7

16

Results ........................................................................................................................................... 10

17

Measurement of dissolved ozone in water ................................................................................ 10

18

Effect of ultrasound on the viability of Escherichia coliusing theUSO3 system. ..................... 11

19

Effect of ozone on 75L Escherichia coli treated with the USO3 system for 16 minutes ......... 13

20 21

Combined effect of ultrasound and ozone on the viability of Escherichia coli treated using the USO3 system ............................................................................................................................. 14

22

Discussion ..................................................................................................................................... 16

23

Acknowledgment .......................................................................................................................... 21

24

References ..................................................................................................................................... 21

25 26

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

1

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 2 of 25

27 28

Abstract

29

the biological disinfection of water on a large-scale application using viable plate counts and

30

flow cytometry.

31

Methods and results: Escherichia coli B bacteria in saline suspension was treated using a

32

commercially available combined ultrasound and ozone system (USO3 - USS, Ultrasonic

33

Systems Gmbh, Germany) for 16 minutes. Two analytical methods were used to assess the

34

results in terms of live and dead cells in the bulk liquid: standard viable plate counting recorded

35

in terms of Colony Forming Units (CFU) per ml and flow cytometry (FCM). In the latter case 1

36

ml bacterial suspension was stained simultaneously with the fluorescent stains SYTO9 and

37

Propidium Iodide (PI). Transmission electron microscopy was used to generate images

38

identifying the biological effects of different treatments using ultrasound and ozone on bacterial

39

cell walls. Results demonstrated that treatment with ozone alone (1mg/l) resulted in a significant

40

reduction (93%) in the number of live cells after 16 minutes treatment whereas ultrasound alone

41

showed only a small reduction (24%). However a combination of ozone and ultrasound showed a

42

synergistic effect and enhanced the inactivation to 99%after 4 minutes.

43

Conclusion: A combined ultrasound and ozone treatment of bacterial suspensions using a

44

commercial system (USS, Ultrasonic Systems Gmbh) affords a promising method for water

45

disinfection that is better than treatment using either method alone. Standard viable plate count

46

analysis is normally used to assess the effectiveness of disinfection treatments; however flow

47

cytometry proved to be a more sensitive method to determine the actual effects in terms of not

48

only live and dead cells but also damaged cells. This type of analysis (cell damage) is difficult if

49

not impossible to achieve using traditional plate counting methodology.

Aim of the study: To assess the synergetic effect of combined ultrasound and ozone treatment on

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

2

Page 3 of 25

Environmental Science & Technology

50 51

Introduction

52

replacement for chlorination in that it reduces disinfection by-products [1]. It is an unstable tri-

53

oxygen molecule which easily releases oxygen atoms in aqueous solutions which subsequently

54

reacts with hydrogen ions in water leading to increased levels of hydroxyl radicals (OH●) in the

55

medium [2]. Joret showed that ozone had lethal effects on a wide range of microbes, such as

56

bacteria, viruses, parasites, Candida, polio virus and Mycobacterium through oxidizing the cell

57

membrane resulting in cell disruption [3]. Disinfection by ozone is strongly dependent on water

58

characteristics such as dissolved organic carbon (DOC), pH, temperature and bromide

59

concentrations [4][5].

Ozone is an important disinfection gas for drinking water treatment and is a suitable

60

Over the last 20 years researchers and engineers have found that a combination of two or more

61

disinfection methods involving oxidation (Advanced Oxidation Processes - AOPs) is very

62

effective in water purification. AOPs help to improve water quality and reduce treatment costs

63

[6]. Combinations of ultrasound with other oxidants such as ozone, chlorine and hydrogen

64

peroxide (H2O2) have been investigated [4]. These studies concluded that employing a

65

combination of ozone and ultrasound treatments in the secondary stage of wastewater treatment

66

resulted in reductions in the required contact time to inactivate microorganisms.

67

The collapse of acoustic cavitation bubbles generated during the application of ultrasound to

68

aqueous systems affords several routes to disinfection [7][8]. Cavitation bubble collapse creates

69

a “hot spot” where extremely high temperatures, pressures and free radicals form [9]. The

70

possible effects of sonication on microorganisms are:

71 72 73



High temperatures in and around the collapsing bubble resulting in enzyme denaturation

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

3

Environmental Science & Technology

74



75 76 77

Page 4 of 25

High hydro-mechanical pressures generated on bubble collapse resulting in shear forces and liquid jets which lyse cells



Production of a highly oxidative species of OH● and H2O2from the hot spots which can attack and weaken cell membranes by attacking their chemical structure [10] [11].

78

The impact of ultrasound on bacteria has been reported in previous studies that focus on cell

79

inactivation, the release of cell contents and the production of a temporary permeability of cell

80

walls. In addition, the effect of ultrasound on inactivation of microorganisms using varying

81

treatment times for many pure cultures of different bacteria, yeast, fungi and viruses has been

82

reported [12][13].

83

Microorganism inactivation has also been investigated using a combination of ultrasound with

84

ozone or UV radiation [14][15][16][17], high pressures and temperatures, or different ultrasonic

85

parameters [18][19].

86

Previous investigations of combined treatments with ozone and ultrasound have indicated that

87

the synergistic effect of sonication and ozone significantly increases bacterial inactivation rates.

88

Jyoti and Pandit indicated that microbial damage resulting from hydro-mechanical forces is

89

greater than sonochemical effects [20]. It was reported that the combination of hydrodynamic

90

acoustic cavitation and ozone reduced power consumption, in addition to reducing the formation

91

of disinfection by-products (DBP) during treatment [21].

92 93

Jyoti and Pandit used the viable plate count (VPC) analysis method to assess the effect of

94

acoustic cavitation and ozone on microbial disruption [22]. However, culture based methods are

95

time consuming and do not identify sub-lethally damaged cells. Such cells retain some metabolic

96

activity but are unable to produce a viable colony on solid growth media (agar). This can occur

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

4

Page 5 of 25

Environmental Science & Technology

97

when bacteria undergo stress but are not completely inactivated or killed by water treatment

98

methods such as chlorination. However, if sufficient numbers of these organisms are ingested

99

they have the potential to cause illness [23]. Therefore, there is an increasing interest in finding

100

an analytical technique which can yield more information on the physiological status of bacteria

101

than can be deduced from standard culture methods. Additionally, different environmental

102

conditions can affect the viable counting method [24]. Various characteristics must be

103

considered when evaluating microbial viability which includes membrane integrity, cell growth

104

and metabolic activity; however membrane integrity has received the majority of research [25].

105

Flow cytometry (FCM) is capable of quantifying features of cells primarily by visual means.

106

FCM records measurements from individual cells but can process thousands of cells (10,000

107

events) in seconds. In conjunction with fluorescent staining it can provide information relating to

108

the estimation and discrimination of different physiological characteristics of cells [24].The aim

109

of this study was to evaluate the application of FCM with dual staining for a rapid, accurate and

110

reliable assessment of cell viability after ultrasound, ozone and combined treatments using the

111

USS system. The results were compared with those obtained using a traditional CFU culture

112

method.

113 114

Material and methods Preparation and viability assessment of bacterial suspensions

115

A stock suspension of Escherichia coli was prepared according to [26]. 1 ml of bacterial

116

suspension was taken after 0, 2, 4, 8 and 16 minutes treatment and added to 9 ml of 0.9% saline

117

(9 g/L sigma Aldrich Ltd.) containing sodium thiosulfate Na2S2O3 (2 g/l) to neutralise any

118

residual ozone in the sample. Samples were serially diluted to obtain 2g/l [14]. Each dilution was

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

5

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 6 of 25

119

cultured on nutrient agar plates in triplicates and incubated at 37°C for 24 hours. The results

120

from plate counts were converted into CFU/ml:

121 122

CFU’s/ml = No. of colonies * volume of cultured sample * dilution of sample

123 124

Ultrasound and ozone system (USO 3 )

125

A large-scale water treatment device from Ultrasonic Systems Gmbh, Germany, was employed

126

to deliver ultrasound and ozone for water treatment using a technology known as USO3. The

127

system consisted of an ozone generator, 20 ultrasonic transducers at maximum power setting

128

(100 Watt each/612 kHz), a mixer and external pump that was capable of treating up to a

129

maximum capacity of 4 m3/h = 66.67 L/min. Internally, the system consisted of long steel tubes

130

with a diameter of 108.3 mm, L = 3.02 m, V = 28 L = 0.028 m3), retention time: 0.8 min. The

131

bacterial suspension was pumped into the USO3 kit using an external pump (flow rate 35 L/min).

132

Experiments were performed at a constant flow rate of 35 L/min, delivering a constant ozone

133

supply capable of generating a concentration which accumulated to 1 mg/L. The aqueous

134

suspension of the bacteria was treated at this flow rate in a recycling system for 16 minutes with

135

pulsed ultrasonic treatment on for 5 seconds and off for 5 seconds. The ozone concentration was

136

measured using the indigo colorimetric method [27].

137 138

Transmission electron microscopy

139

A transmission electron microscope TEM was used to provide high resolution images, (2010F,

140

JEOL Ltd., Japan). The instrument used a 200kV field emission gun instrument in cryo-

141

conditions and was fitted with a GatanUltraScan™ 4000 camera which provided the spatial

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

6

Page 7 of 25

Environmental Science & Technology

142

resolution necessary for detailed biological structural analysis and very high magnification of

143

samples down to 0.5nm with three dimensional imaging.

144 145

Experiment design

146

75 L of Escherichia coli bacterial suspension (OD 0.01, 2x105 cell/ml) was treated with

147

ultrasound alone, ozone alone (1mg/l, power 160 W, 10% gas flow) and a combination of

148

ultrasound and ozone for 16 minutes. Samples were taken after 0, 2, 4, 8 and 16 minutes

149

treatment and the residual ozone in sample was neutralised using 2% sodium thiosulfate (Sigma

150

Aldrich Ltd.) in sterile saline (0.9% NaCl Sigma Aldrich Ltd.). An in-built cooling system was

151

used to maintain sample temperature below 25ºC. Samples were analysed by viable plate counts

152

to measure CFU/ml and flow cytometry. All data was analysed using ANOVA test.

153 154

Bacterial staining and flow cytometry

155

The use of double staining techniques involving nucleic acid stains (SYTO9) (green

156

fluorescence) and Propidium Iodide (PI) (red fluorescence) provide a valuable method for the

157

estimation of bacteria viability [185]. The fluorescent probes/stains and counting kit for flow

158

cytometry were purchased from Invitrogen (LIVE/DEAD® BaclightTM bacterial viability and

159

counting kit) which consisted of two stains SYTO9 (nucleic acid stain) at a dose of 200 µl (3.34

160

mM in DMSO) specific for live cells, Propidium Iodide (PI) at a dose of 200 µl (20 mM in

161

DMSO) for dead cells. The calibration beads were microsphere standard beads 6.0 µm diameter

162

with a concentration of 1×108 beads/ml in deionised water (10ml) containing 2 mM sodium

163

azide.

164 165

Flow cytometry measures several parameters at the same time for each cell:

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

7

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 8 of 25

166

Low angle forward scatter intensity (FSC) is proportional to cell diameter.

167

Orthogonal (90º) scatter intensity (SSC) relates to the quantity of granular structures within the

168

cell. Fluorescence intensities at several wavelengths can be observed using different fluorescence

169

channels.

170

Estimation of cell integrity or viability using flow cytometry

171

500 µl bacterial suspensions were collected in an Eppendorf tube (1.5 ml). Samples were

172

simultaneously stained with SYTO9 and Propidium Iodide (PI). Fluorochromes were added

173

according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Dyes were purchased as a BaclightTM bacterial

174

viability and counting kit from Invitrogen Ltd. 1.5 µl of fluorescent stain was added to each

175

sample, vortexed and analysed after 10-30 minutes incubation at room temperature. Excitation of

176

SYTO9 emitted green fluorescence at 525-550 nm and excitation of PI at 536nm produced red

177

fluorescence at 600nm. Viable cells (with intact membranes) are only permeable to SYTO9 but

178

not PI; hence viable cells emit green fluorescence. In contrast, dead cells (with permeabilised

179

membranes) were stained with PI and emit red fluorescence. BD FACS Calibur flow cytometry

180

was optimised by FACS COMP standard fluorescence beads (2 µm) to verify the instrument

181

performance. Bacterial populations were positioned so that they were all located in scale on a

182

FSC V’s SSC plot. For fluorescence measurements, FL1, FL2 and FL3 voltages were adjusted to

183

place the unstained populations in the lower left quadrant of two parameter plots. Flow

184

cytometry instruments settings were as follows: threshold (FSC), FSC (E02), PMT 4.75

185

(logarithmic amplification (LA), SSC-597 V (LA), FL1 617/550 V (LA), FL2 531 V (LA) and

186

FL3 623 V (LA). 10,000 cells were acquired per acquisition and bacterial populations were gated

187

using a combination of FSC, SSC, live/dead cells and discriminated using FL1 V’s FL3. Live (3

188

hour bacterial culture) and dead (heating bacterial cells to 75°C for 30 minutes) controls were

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

8

Page 9 of 25

Environmental Science & Technology

189

also undertaken to calibrate results. To ensure continuity of results all experiments were run for a

190

total of 16 minutes.

191 192 193

Effect of ultrasound and ozone separately a nd in combination on the biological structure of bacterial cell walls using CRYO TEM analysis

194

Escherichia coli bacterial suspension was placed in a suitable container and treated with

195

ultrasound alone ozone alone and a combination of ultrasound and ozone for 16 minutes using

196

the USO3 system. Samples were taken at 0, 2, 4, 8 and 16 minutes and analysed using TEM

197

microscopy. To determine the percentage inactivation by TEM, a protocol was followed where

198

intact cells were considered to be robust and cells displaying a loss of cell integrity were

199

considered dead. For each TEM calculation 100 cells within a grid were observed following each

200

treatment. Cells which appear to show damage were then converted to a percentage.

201 202

Supporting Information

203

Figure 1 Schematic diagram of the USO3 system taken from the manual provided by USS, (20

204

ultrasonic transducers at maximum power setting (100 Watt each/612 kHz)

Output

Input

205 Ultrasonic transducer

Opti-mixer

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

9

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 10 of 25

206 207 208

Measurement of dissolved ozone in water

209

NaCl (0.9 g/l) was added to 75 L of fresh water to convert the water to saline which was

210

circulated through the ultrasound and ozone (USO3) system for 16 minutes. 50ml of sample was

211

collected and analysed using the UV-Vis spectrophotometer (Shimadzu, UK 5030). Results

212

illustrate that the absorbance of water samples at 254 nm increased over 16 minutes treatment,

213

which is due to the accumulation of ozone in water over 16 minutes treatment (Figure 2).

214 215

Figure 2 Accumulation of residual ozone in 75 L water using the ultrasound and ozone system

216

over 16 minutes analysed using UV-Vis spectrophotometry

Control

Ozone (ppm)

Abs.

Time [min]

217 218 219

Results

220

Effect of ultrasound on the viability of Escherichia coliusing theUSO 3 system.

221

A single bacterial suspension of Escherichia coli was treated with ultrasound for 16 minutes.

222

Results illustrate a small inactivation effect of 24% on the number of live cells over 16 minutes

223

treatment compared to controls (Figure 3). This is in accord with other results obtained at a

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

10

Page 11 of 25

Environmental Science & Technology

224

laboratory scale using higher frequencies [26] [28]. 512 kHz was used to treat different types of

225

bacteria for 15 and 60 minutes which achieved less than 1 log reduction at the end of the

226

treatment time.

227 228

Figure 3 Effect of ultrasound on the viability of Escherichia coli, (OD 0.01, 2x105 cell/ml) using

229

the USO3 system for 16 minutes analysed using viable plate counts Control

CFU/ml

US

230 231

Time [min]

232

The bacteria were also analysed by flow cytometry using the Invitrogen BaclightTM bacterial

233

viability and counting kit. The dot plots illustrated in Figure 4 represent bacterial populations

234

that are divided into two populations; live cells appearing in the lower right (LR) quadrant and

235

dead cells in the lower left (LL) quadrant. Flow cytometry data illustrates small reductions of

236

26% in the number of live cells after 16 minutes treatment. Flow cytometry data supports viable

237

plate count results, but some cells were observed in the live cells position after treatment.

238

Although there were still some cells observed in the position expected for live cells the majority

239

of cellular material after treatment appeared in an intermediate position between that for live

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

11

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 12 of 25

240

cells and that for dead cells. This is where one would normally find viable but non culturable

241

(VBNC) cells. Cell wall fragments may up take some of the background fluorescent stain.

242 243 244

Figure 4 Effect of ultrasound on the viability of Escherichia coli treated with the USO3 system

245

for 16 minutes analysed using flow cytometry

246 247

Control

16 min

248 249 250

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

12

Page 13 of 25

Environmental Science & Technology

251 252

Effect of ozone on 75L Escherichia coli treated with theUSO 3 system for 16 minutes

253

A single bacterial suspension of Escherichia coli was treated with ozone using the USO3

254

system for 16 minutes. Results demonstrate a 93% reduction in number of live E. coli cells over

255

16 minutes treatment time (Figure 5). The results obtained for reductions in E. coli are in accord

256

with those of other researchers who achieved 1 log reduction for E. coli [30].

257 258

Figure 5 Effect of ozone on Escherichia coli using the USO3 system for 16 minutes analysed

259

using viable plate counts

Control

CFU/ml

O3

Time [min]

260 261 262

Escherichia coli were also analysed using flow cytometry as outlined above. The data illustrates

263

a significant reduction of 85% (ANOVA P value 0.01) in the number of live cells within 16

264

minutes of treatment. However, some cells still remained in the lower right (LR) quadrant of the

265

graph after treatment. The appearance of live bacterial cells is due to fragments or parts of cell

266

walls that can uptake fluorescent stains specific for live cells (SYTO9) and so appear in live cell

267

position.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

13

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 14 of 25

268

Figure 6 Effect of ozone on Escherichia coli treated with the USO3 system for 16 minutes

269

analysed using flow cytometry

270

Control

16 min

271 272 273 274

Combined effect of ultrasound and ozone on the viability of Escherichia coli treated using the USO 3 system

275

A single bacterial suspension of Escherichia coli was simultaneously treated with ultrasound and

276

ozone for 16 minutes. Results illustrate a significant inactivation effect of 99% occurred after 4

277

minutes treatment (Figure 7).

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

14

Page 15 of 25

Environmental Science & Technology

278

Figure 7 Effect of ultrasound and ozone on the viability of Escherichia coli using the USO3

279

system for 16 minutes analysed using viable plate counts Control

CFU/ml

USO3

Time [min]

280 281 282 283 284

Complete inactivation was achieved within 4 minutes, which can be ascribed to a synergistic effect of ultrasound and ozone.

285

Flow cytometry data showed a significant reduction of 99% (ANOVA P value 0.01) in the

286

number of live cells along with an increase in number of dead cells over 16 minutes treatment

287

with ultrasound and ozone (Figure 8). However, a small number of cells (0.6%) appeared to

288

remain in the lower right quadrant following treatment.

289 290

Figure 8 Effect of ultrasound and ozone on the viability of Escherichia coli using the USO3

291

system for 16 minutes analysed using FCM

292 293

Control

16 min

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

15

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 16 of 25

294 295 296 297

Discussion Effect of ultrasound alone on Escherichia coli treated with the USO3 system for 16 minutes

298

Bacterial cells treated with ultrasound alone using the USO3 system demonstrated a small

299

inactivation effect 24% according to VPC and 26% according to FCM (ANOVA P value 0.05)

300

after 16 minutes treatment. This is in accord with previous findings at 512 kHz in that higher

301

frequencies at low power have low inactivation effects [26].FCM illustrated a good correlation

302

with VPC results supporting this evidence of poor inactivation rates [30] [32].

303 304

Effect of ozone alone on Escherichia coli treated with the USO3system for 16 minutes

305

Ozone treatment clearly demonstrated a significant reduction (93% according to VPC and 85%

306

according to FCM) (ANOVA P value 0.01) in bacterial cells following 16 minutes treatment.

307

Flow cytometry data showed a significant reduction in the number of live cells along with

308

increases in the number of dead cells. A study by Sharma reported a promising technique to

309

oxidize bacteria in the food and water industry, resulting in more than a 3.5 log reduction in

310

viable cells after treatment with 1 ppm ozone for 60 minutes using a selection of bacterial strains

311

including the spore forming bacteria Bacillus subtilis [31].

312

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

16

Page 17 of 25

313 314 315 316

Environmental Science & Technology

Effect of combined treatment ultrasound and ozone on Escherichia coli treated with the USO3system for 16 minutes Ultrasound can enhance the effect of ozone on bacteria through a number of processes: 

317 318

De-clumping of bacterial clusters to disperse bacteria as single cells which are more susceptible to oxidation by ozone



319

Formation and collapse of cavitation bubbles leads to weakening of the bacterial cells due to breaking chemical bonds in the cell membrane

320



Sonication enhances ozone decomposition rates in water during treatment

321



Sonication increases the level of free radicals and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in the

322

medium which has bactericidal effects on various microorganisms [25]. Combined

323

treatment using the USO3 system produced complete inactivation (99% according to

324

VPC and 99% according to FCM) in bacterial cells within 4 minutes treatment.

325

Ultrasound clearly enhanced the effect of ozone on bacterial inactivation (ANOVA P

326

value 0.01).

327

It is clear that the application of (USO3) could significantly contribute in water treatment

328

plants. The combination of ozone and ultrasound provides synergetic effects which can

329

substantially reduce the cost of treatment and improves health and safety issues associated with

330

ozone production. In addition, by employing combined techniques (USO3) can rapidly achieve a

331

reliable and safe quality of water for consumers.

332

(TEM) evidence of the effect of ultrasound alone for 16 minutes on the biological structure of

333

Escherichia coli treated with the USO3system

334

TEM imaging was used to show any structural changes on the cells when a Escherichia coli

335

bacterial suspension was treated with ultrasound alone. Results showed cell shrinkage and cracks

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

17

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 18 of 25

336

in some cell walls and in some cases destruction of the entire cell. Overall approximately 24% of

337

bacterial cells had an irregular shape after treatment. An example of a normal and damaged cell

338

is shown in (Figure 9).

339 340

Figure 9 (TEM) images showing the effect of ultrasound on the biological structure of

341

Escherichia coli treated with the USO3 system (A) control (untreated 24 hour culture, bacterial

342

cell with intact cell wall) (B) 16 minutes ultrasound treatment (bacterial cell wall with irregular

343

surface and holes due to sonication treatment)

344 345

(A) Control

(B) 16 min treatment

346 347 348 349 350

(TEM) evidence of the effect of ozone alone (1mg/L) on the biological structure of Escherichia coli treated with the USO3 system

351

Escherichia coli bacterial suspension was treated with ozone alone to determine the effect of

352

ozone on the biological structure of bacterial cells. Results show that ozone produces holes in the

353

cell walls as a result of oxidation effects. Overall approximately 86% of bacterial cells had such

354

holes in their cell wall and some of the cells had lost their entire cell wall after treatment (Figure

355

10).These results are in accord with those of Sharma who demonstrated bactericidal effects of

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

18

Page 19 of 25

Environmental Science & Technology

356

ozone result from the disruption of envelope integrity through peroxidation of phospholipids and

357

lipoproteins [31].Overall approximately 86% of bacterial cells lost their cell wall after treatment

358

(Figure 10).

359 360

Figure 10 (TEM) images showing the effect of ozone alone on the biological structure of

361

Escherichia coli treated with the USO3 system (A) control (B) 16 minutes ozone treatment

362

(A) Control

(B) 16 min treatment

363 364 365

Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) evidence of the effect of combined treatments of

366

ultrasound and ozone on the biological structure of Escherichia coli treated with the USO3

367

system. Escherichia coli were subjected to combined treatment with ultrasound and ozone for 16

368

minutes using the USO3system. Results illustrate that combined treatment with ultrasound and

369

ozone had a significantly greater inactivation effect than separate treatment. TEM images show

370

that 95% of the bacteria lost the entire cell walls after treatment, which may be due to the

371

synergistic effect of ultrasound and ozone over 16 minutes treatment (Figure 11).

372 373

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

19

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 20 of 25

374

Figure 11 (TEM) images showing the effect of ultrasound and ozone on the biological structure

375

of Escherichia coli treated with the USO3 system (A) control (B) 16 minutes treatment with

376

ultrasound and ozone

377 378

(A) Control

(B) 16 min treatment

379 380 381 382

From the above TEM images it is clear that ultrasound combined with ozone had a great

383

impact on the biological structure of Escherichia coli bacteria. Ozone alone has a significant

384

effect on the bacterial cells but ultrasound enhanced this effect resulting in cell shrinkage due to

385

cell wall removal and the subsequent release of cell contents. This may be due to the combined

386

ultrasonic effects (hydro-mechanical pressures resulting in shear forces and liquid jets which lyse

387

cells, high temperatures and chemical effects due to the production of highly oxidative species of

388

OH● and H2O2), which have a strong anti-microbial action on cells [26].Summary of the (TEM)

389

results for bacterial inactivation. The percentage inactivation by TEM was determined using the

390

protocol outlined in the material and methods section and the results are shown (Table 1).

391 392

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

20

Page 21 of 25

Environmental Science & Technology

393

Table 1 Percentage inactivation in E. coli bacteria 1011 cell/ml treated using the USO3 system for

394

16 minutes analysed by TEM

395 Bacterial Ultrasound Strain (612 kHz) E. coli E. coli YES E. coli YES

Ozone (0.5 mg/l) YES YES

Treatment time(min) 16 16 16

% inactivation 86 24 95

396 397 398

Acknowledgment

399

The authors would like to thank the Iraqi Ministry of Higher Education who supported this

400

research, Dr. Afthab Hussain at Coventry University for assistance with flow cytometry and Mr.

401

Ian Portman director of the imaging suite at Warwick University for support in TEM data

402

analysis.

403 404

References 1. Von Gunten, U. ‘Ozonation of Drinking Water: Part II. ‘Disinfection and by-Product

405

Formation in Presence of Bromide, Iodide or Chlorine'. Water Research. 2009, 37 (7), 1469-

406

1487

407

2. Pascual, A.;Liorca I.;Canut, A. ‘Use of Ozone in Food Industries for Reducing the

408

Environmental Impact of Cleaning and Disinfection Activities'. Food Sciences and Technology.

409

2009, 18, S29-S35.

410

3. Joret, J.; Mennecart, V.; Robert, C.; Compagnon, B.; Cervantes, P. ‘Inactivation of

411

Indigenous Bacteria in Water by Ozone and Chlorine'. Water Science and Technology. 1975, 35

412

(11-12), 81-86.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

21

Environmental Science & Technology

413 414 415 416

Page 22 of 25

4. Burleson, G.; Murray, T.; Pollard, M. ‘Inactivation of Viruses and Bacteria by Ozone, with and without Sonication'. Journal of Applied Microbiology’. 1975, 29 (3), 340-344. 5. Hunt, N.; Mariñas, B. ‘Kinetics of Escherichia coli Inactivation with Ozone'. Water Research. 1997, 31 (6), 1355-1362.

417

6. Mezule, L.; Tsyfansky, S.; Yakushevich, V.; Juhna, T. ‘A Simple Technique for Water

418

Disinfection with Hydrodynamic Cavitation: Effect on Survival of Escherichia coli'.

419

Desalination. 2009, 248 (1-3), 152-159.

420

7. Joyce, E.M.; Mason, T.M. ‘Sonication used as a biocide, A review: Ultrasound a greener

421

alternative to chemical biocides?’, Chemistry Today, 2008, 26(6).

422 423 424 425 426 427

8. Wu, X.; Joyce, E.M.; Mason, T.J. ‘The effects of ultrasound on cyanobacteria Harmful Algae’, 2011, 10 (6), 738-743, 9. Mason, T.; Joyce, E.; Phull, S.; Lorimer, J. ‘Potential Uses of Ultrasound in the Biological Decontamination of Water’. Ultrasonic Sonochemistry. 2003, 10 (6), 319-23. 10. Mason, T.; Lorimer, P.‘Applied Sonochemistry the Uses of Power Ultrasound in Chemistry and Processing’. Verlage GmbH -Weinheim: Wiley- VCH. 2001

428

11. Mason, T. Sonochemistry. 1st Ed. New York: Oxford University Primes.,1999.

429

12. Hua, J.;Thompson, J. ‘Inactivation of E. coli by Sonication at Discrete Ultrasonic

430 431 432

Frequencies’. Water Research. 2000, 34 (15), 3888-3893. 13. Mahvi, H.A. ‘Application of Ultrasonic Technology for Water and Wastewater Treatment’. Iranian Journal of Public Health. 2009, 38(12). 1-17.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

22

Page 23 of 25

433

Environmental Science & Technology

14. Kruithof, J.; Kamp, P.; Martijn, B.;Belosevic, M.; Williams, G. Proceedings of the Third

434

International

435

http://iuva.org/sites/default/files/member/news/IUVA_news/Vol08/Issue2/MohseniArticle.pdf

436 437

Congress

on

Ultraviolet

Technologies:

Vancouver,

BC,

Canada.2005;

15. Blume, T.; Neis, U. ‘Improved Wastewater Disinfection by Ultrasonic Pre-Treatment’. UltrasonicsSonochemistry. 2004, 11 (5), 333-336.

438

16. Rashmi, C.; David, H.; Bremnera, C.; Namkungb, P.;Colliera, J.; Parag, R. ‘Water

439

Disinfection using the Novel Approach of Ozone and a Liquid Whistle Reactor’. Biochemical

440

Engineering Journal. 2007, 53 (3), 357-364.

441

17. Drakopoulou, S.; Terzakis, S.;Fountoulakis, M. S.; Mantzavinos, D.; Manios, T.

442

‘Ultrasound-Induced Inactivation of Gram-Negative and Gram-Positive Bacteria in Secondary

443

Treated Municipal Wastewater’. UltrasonicsSonochemistry. 2009, 16 (5), 629-634.

444 445

18. Berlan, J.; Mason, T. Advances in Sonochemistry.' 6th Ed. Horwood publishing limitted, West Sussex England, 1996.

446

19. Joyce, E.M.; Wu, X.; Mason, T.J. 'Effect of ultrasonic frequency and power on algae

447

suspensions'. Journal of Environmental Science and Health. A, Tox/Hazard Subst Environ Eng.

448

2010, 45 (7), 863-866.

449 450

20. Jyoti, K.; Pandit, A. ‘Effect of Cavitation on Chemical Disinfection Efficiency'. Water Research. 2004, 38 (9), 2249-2258.

451

21. Noci, F.; Walkling-Ribeiro, M.; Cronin, D.; Morgan, D.; Lyng, J. ‘Effect of

452

Thermosonication, Pulsed Electric Field and their Combination on Inactivation of

453

Listeriainnocua in Milk’. International Dairy Journal. 2009, 19 (1), 30-35.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

23

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 24 of 25

454

22. Papadimitriou, K.; Pratsinis, H.; Nebe-von-Caron, G.; Kletsas, D.; Tsakalidou, E ‘Rapid

455

Assessment of the Physiological Status of Streptococcus macedonicus by Flow Cytometry and

456

Fluorescence Probes’. International Journal of Food Microbiology. 2006, 111 (3), 197-205.

457

23. Gunasekera, T.; Veal, D.;Attfield, P. ‘Potential for Broad Applications of Flow Cytometry

458

and Fluorescence Techniques in Microbiological and Somatic Cell Analyses of Milk’.

459

International Journal of Food Microbiology. 2003, 85 (3), 269-279.

460 461 462 463

24. Ramaiah, S.; Yew- Hoong Gin, Y.; Chit, Laa, P. 'Monitoring of Active but Non-Culturable Bacterial Cells by Flow Cytometry’. Biotechnology and Bioengineering. 2004, 89 (1), 24-31. 25. Bader, H. and Hoigene, J. 'Determination of ozone in water by the indigo method’. Water Research. 1981, 15, 449.

464

26. Joyce, E.; Phull, S.; Lorimer, P.; Mason, T. ‘The Development and Evaluation of

465

Ultrasound for the Treatment of Bacterial Suspensions. A Study of Frequency, Power and

466

Sonication Time on Cultured Bacillus Species’. UltrasonicsSonochemistry. 2007, 10 (6), 315-

467

318.

468

27. Joyce, E.; Al-Hashimi, A. and Mason, T.J. ‘Assessing the effect of different ultrasonic

469

frequencies on bacterial viability using flow cytometry’. 2011, Journal of Applied Microbiology,

470

110 (4).862–870

471

28. Joyce, E.M.; Mason, T.J.; Lorimer, J.P. ‘Application of UV radiation or electrochemistry in

472

conjunction with power ultrasound for the disinfection of water. Photo Electrochemical

473

Treatment of Water and Waste Water’. Journal of Environment and Pollution. 2007, 27 (1/2/3),

474

222-230

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

24

Page 25 of 25

Environmental Science & Technology

475

29. Foladori, P.; Laura, B.; Gianni, A.; Giuliano, Z. ‘Effects of Sonication on Bacteria

476

Viability in Wastewater Treatment Plants Evaluated by Flow Cytometry-Fecal Indicators,

477

Wastewater and Activated Sludge’. Water Research. 2007, 41 (1), 235-243.

478

30. Akbas, M. and Ozdemir, M. ‘Application of Gaseous Ozone to Control Populations of

479

Escherichia coli, Bacillus cereus and Bacillus cereus Spores in Dried Figs’.Food Microbiology.

480

2008, 25 (2), 386-391.31. Sharma,V. G.; Grahamb ,J.D. ‘Oxidation of Amino Acids, Peptides

481

and Proteins by Ozone: A Review., ozone’. Science & Engineering: The Journal of the

482

International Ozone Association. 2010, 32 (2). 81-90.

483 484

32. Jyoti, K. and Pandit, A. ‘Ozone and cavitation for water disinfection’. Biochemical Engineering Journal. 2004, 18(1), 9-19.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

25