Decontamination of Bacillus spores adhered to iron and cement-mortar drinking water infrastructure in a model system using disinfectants

J Environ Manage. 2017 Feb 1:187:1-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.11.024. Epub 2016 Nov 16.

Abstract

Decontamination of Bacillus spores adhered to common drinking water infrastructure surfaces was evaluated using a variety of disinfectants. Corroded iron and cement-mortar lined iron represented the infrastructure surfaces, and were conditioned in a 23 m long, 15 cm diameter (75 ft long, 6 in diameter) pilot-scale drinking water distribution pipe system. Decontamination was evaluated using increased water velocity (flushing) alone at 0.5 m s-1 (1.7 ft s-1), as well as free chlorine (5 and 25 mg L-1), monochloramine (25 mg L-1), chlorine dioxide (5 and 25 mg L-1), ozone (2.0 mg L-1), peracetic acid 25 mg L-1) and acidified nitrite (0.1 mol L-1 at pH 2 and 3), all followed by flushing at 0.3 m s-1 (1 ft s-1). Flushing alone reduced the adhered spores by 0.5 and 2.0 log10 from iron and cement-mortar, respectively. Log10 reduction on corroded iron pipe wall coupons ranged from 1.0 to 2.9 at respective chlorine dioxide concentrations of 5 and 25 mg L-1, although spores were undetectable on the iron surface during disinfection at 25 mg L-1. Acidified nitrite (pH 2, 0.1 mol L-1) yielded no detectable spores on the iron surface during the flushing phase after disinfection. Chlorine dioxide was the best performing disinfectant with >3.0 log10 removal from cement-mortar at 5 and 25 mg L-1. The data show that free chlorine, monochloramine, ozone and chlorine dioxide followed by flushing can reduce adhered spores by > 3.0 log10 on cement-mortar.

Keywords: Bacillus; Decontamination; Disinfection; Drinking water; Spores.

MeSH terms

  • Bacillus / drug effects*
  • Bacillus / growth & development
  • Biofilms / drug effects
  • Chloramines / pharmacology
  • Chlorine Compounds / pharmacology
  • Colony Count, Microbial
  • Decontamination / methods*
  • Disinfectants / pharmacology*
  • Disinfection / methods*
  • Drinking Water / microbiology*
  • Iron
  • Oxides / pharmacology
  • Ozone / pharmacology
  • Peracetic Acid / pharmacology
  • Spores, Bacterial / drug effects*
  • Spores, Bacterial / growth & development

Substances

  • Chloramines
  • Chlorine Compounds
  • Disinfectants
  • Drinking Water
  • Oxides
  • Ozone
  • chlorine dioxide
  • Iron
  • Peracetic Acid
  • chloramine