Applied Catalysis B: Environmental, Vol.125, 375-382, 2012
Heterogenous photocatalytic inactivation of B. stearothermophilus endospores in aqueous suspensions under artificial and solar irradiation
TiO2 mediated photocatalytic disinfection constitutes an attractive emerging technology against water-borne diseases transmitted through pathogenic microorganisms. This study demonstrates the potential of TiO2 suspensions to fully inactivate highly resistant microorganisms, Bacillus stearothermophilus endospores in water, in the presence of artificial and solar irradiation. Photo-inactivation, however, in the absence of TiO2 led to twelve times lower reaction rates and in the inactivation of only 50% of the initial endospore population, in the same time intervals. The addition of limited amounts of ferric species, as well as catalyst surface modification by Ag and Pt deposition, clearly results in enhanced reaction rates. Furthermore, electron micrographs correlate endospore inactivation and inability to reactivate in the dark with extended morphological lesions of the spore structure, caused by the photocatalytically generated reactive oxygen species. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.