4.8 Article

Action spectra for validation of pathogen disinfection in medium-pressure ultraviolet (UV) systems

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 70, Issue -, Pages 27-37

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2014.11.028

Keywords

Inactivation; Phage; Surrogate; Water treatment; Polychromatic

Funding

  1. Water Research Foundation [4376]
  2. Los Angeles Department of Water and Power
  3. Aquionics
  4. Calgon Carbon Corporation
  5. Atlantium Technologies
  6. ITT Wedeco
  7. ETS
  8. Trojan Technologies
  9. Tetra Tech Clancy Environmental Consultants
  10. Hydroqual/HDR
  11. CDM, Black Veatch
  12. CH2M Hill
  13. Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
  14. NY State Department of Health
  15. CA DHS
  16. WA DOH
  17. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

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Ultraviolet (UV) reactors used for disinfecting water and wastewater must be validated and monitored over time. The validation process requires understanding the photochemical properties of the pathogens of concern and the challenge microorganisms used to represent them. Specifically for polychromatic UV systems, the organisms' dose responses to UV light and their sensitivity across the UV spectrum must be known. This research measured the UV spectral sensitivity, called action spectra, of Cryptosporidium parvum, and MS2, T1UV, Q Beta, T7, and T7m Coliphages, as well as Bacillus pumilus spores. A tunable laser from the National Institute of Standards and Technology was used to isolate single UV wavelengths at 10 nm intervals between 210 and 290 nm. Above 240 nm, all bacteria and viruses tested exhibited a relative peak sensitivity between 260 and 270 nm. Of the coliphage, MS2 exhibited the highest relative sensitivity below 240 nm, relative to its sensitivity at 254 nm, followed by Q Beta, T1UV, T7m and T7 coliphage. B. pumilus spores were more sensitive to UV light at 220 nm than any of the coliphage. These spectra are required for calculating action spectra correction factors for medium pressure UV system validation, for matching appropriate challenge microorganisms to pathogens, and for improving UV dose monitoring. Additionally, understanding the dose response of these organisms at multiple wavelengths can improve polychromatic UV dose calculations and enable prediction of pathogen inactivation from wavelength-specific disinfection technologies such as UV light emitting diodes (LEDs). (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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