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Enhanced bacterial inactivation by activated carbon modified with nano-sized silver oxides: Performance and mechanism

Abstract

In this study, nano-sized silver oxides were loaded on activated carbon (nAg2O/AC) through a facile impregnation-calcination method for enhanced bacterial inactivation from drinking water, in which Escherichia coli (E. coli) was used as target bacteria. XRD and SEM characterization confirmed that nano-sized Ag2O particles (50–200 nm) were successfully prepared and uniformly distributed on the surfaces and pores of AC. Due to the structural reducing groups of AC, surface-bound Ag(I) was partially converted to Ag in the nAg2O matrix and the resulted Ag could sterilize E. coli directly. More importantly, surface-bound Ag could catalyze O2 and H2O to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) for oxidation sterilization, thus significantly enhanced the inactivation efficiency from 0.8 log10 CFU/mL (nAg2O control) and 0.2 log10 CFU/mL (AC control) to 6.0 log10 CFU/mL in the nAg2O/AC system. The inactivation process was highly pH-dependent, and neutral pH was favorable for sterilization. A sterilization efficiency of 5.2 log10 CFU/mL could still be achieved after 5 running cycles, indicating stable sterilization performance of nAg2O/AC. In addition, the nAg2O/AC also exhibited excellent renewability since a sterilization efficiency of 5.8 log10 CFU/mL was obtained after nAg2O being stripped and reloaded on the AC. These results demonstrated that nAg2O-modified AC is an efficient material for sterilization in water treatment.

Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Jianping Deng
  • Bing LI
  • Weizhao Yin
  • Huaitian Bu
  • Bo Yang
  • Ping Li
  • Xiangyu Zheng
  • Jinhua Wu

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Industry / Materials and Nanotechnology
  • China
  • University of Jinan
  • Shenzhen University
  • South China University of Technology

Year

2022

Published in

Journal of Environmental Management (JEM)

ISSN

0301-4797

Volume

331

Page(s)

1 - 7

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository