Predicting the bactericidal efficacy of solar disinfection (SODIS): from kinetic modeling of in vitro tests towards the in silico forecast of E. coli inactivation
Creators
- 1. European Commission, Joint Research Centre
- 2. Politecnico di Torino
- 3. Universidad Rey Juan Carlos
- 4. RCSI University of Medicine and Healthcare
- 5. Ecole Polytechnique F´ed´erale de Lausanne
- 6. Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Description
In this study, the possibility of predicting the efficacy of Solar water disinfection (SODIS) for the removal of
bacterial pathogens was assessed by the development of a three-level plan: firstly, systematic E. coli inactivation
was performed (in vitro) in Lake Geneva water, under otherwise controlled conditions of water temperature
(20–50 ◦C), sunlight intensity (0–1200 W/m2), presence of natural dissolved organic matter (DOM, 0–6 mg/L)
and turbidity (0–50 NTU). As a second step a kinetic evaluation led to the selection of the most relevant parameters
to be included in a novel static and dynamic model theoretical formulation. The static and dynamic
models reliably described the experimental findings (bacterial inactivation under various climatic conditions)
and were considered as equally eligible candidates for disinfection modeling. The final step considered ambient
temperature, incident radiation and cloud-cover data to forecast (in silico) SODIS efficacy in Africa as a case
study. The simulation results were compared with the experimental data and indicated that most African regions
are suitable for SODIS processes, but there are areas of risk correlated with climatological conditions (cloudcover
and temperature). The results of this study could be applied for regional in decision-making strategies for
application of SODIS or in the search for viable alternatives to SODIS in cases where it is deemed unsuitable.
Files
2022 - Samoili et al. - SODIS Africa.pdf
Files
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