4.8 Article

Role of Temperature and Suwannee River Natural Organic Matter on Inactivation Kinetics of Rotavirus and Bacteriophage MS2 by Solar Irradiation

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 45, Issue 24, Pages 10385-10393

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es202067f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [CTS-0120978]
  2. USDA [2008-35102-19143]
  3. NSF CAREER [0954501]
  4. NSF GRF [DGE 07-15088]
  5. Academic Excellence Alliance (AEA) at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST)
  6. Directorate For Engineering
  7. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys [0954501] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Although the sunlight-mediated inactivation of viruses has been recognized as an important process that controls surface water quality, the mechanisms of virus inactivation by sunlight are not yet clearly understood. We investigated the synergistic role of temperature and Suwannee River natural organic matter (SRNOM), an exogenous sensitizer, for sunlight-mediated inactivation of porcine rotavirus and MS2 bacteriophage. Upon irradiation by a full spectrum of simulated sunlight in the absence of SRNOM and in the temperature range of 14-42 degrees C, high inactivation rate constants, k(obs), of MS2 (kobs 3.8 h(-1) or 1-log(10) over 0.6 h) and rotavirus (k(obs) <= 11.8 h(-1) or similar to 1-log(10) over 0.2 h) were measured. A weak temperature (14-42 degrees C) dependence of k(obs) values was observed for both viruses irradiated by the full sunlight spectrum. Under the same irradiation condition, the presence of SRNOM reduced the inactivation of both viruses due to attenuation of lower wavelengths of the simulated sunlight. For rotavirus and MS2 solutions irradiated by only UVA and visible light in the absence of SRNOM, inactivation kinetics were slow (k(obs) <0.3 h(-1) or <1-log(10) unit reduction over 7 h) and temperature-independent for the range considered. Conversely, under UVA and visible light irradiation and in the presence of SRNOM, temperature-dependent inactivation of MS2 was observed. For rotavirus, the SRNOM-mediated exogenous inactivation was only important at temperatures >33 degrees C, with low rotavirus k(obs) values (kobs approximate to, 0.2 h(-1); 1-log(10) unit reduction over 12 h) for the temperature range of 14-33 C. These k(obs) values increased to 0.5 h(-1) at 43 degrees C and 1.5 h(-1) (1-log(10) reduction over 1.6 h) at 50 degrees C. While SRNOM-mediated exogenous inactivation of MS2 was triggered by singlet oxygen, the presence of hydrogen peroxide was important for rotavirus inactivation in the 40-50 degrees C range.

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