Wild-type escherichia coli disinfection by flow cell ultrasound: mechanisms and optimisation through neural networks / Noraini Mat Budari

The goal of this thesis is to investigate the use of the flow cell ultrasonic reactor as a disinfection treatment for the disruption of wild-type cells of E. coli as model organisms and to recommend that the custom ultrasonic reactor be adaptable to real environmental disinfectants as there is growi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mat Budari, Noraini
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/76529/1/76529.pdf
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Summary:The goal of this thesis is to investigate the use of the flow cell ultrasonic reactor as a disinfection treatment for the disruption of wild-type cells of E. coli as model organisms and to recommend that the custom ultrasonic reactor be adaptable to real environmental disinfectants as there is growing global concern about green disinfection technology. There are several challenges associated with ultrasound treatment; the requirement for high energy consumption continues to be a significant constraint on ultrasonic application in water and wastewater treatment systems, as well as industrial applications. Additionally, the lower cavitation region and irradiating surface of the ultrasonic reactor reduce treatment performance. Besides that, there is insufficient information about the cell’s mechanical impacts, as evidenced by qualitative and quantitative methods using depth microscopy and particle size analysis of ultrasonic treatment on E. coli wild-type cells disruption. A comprehensive investigation using a combination of microscopy techniques, including gram-staining analysis, Environmental Scanning Electron Microscopy and High-Resolution Transmission Electron Microscopy, demonstrated and concluded that flow cell ultrasound treatment had a significant effect on cell disruption. Furthermore, with the design of frequency transducers at 30 kHz, this improves the performance of the ultrasonic reactor and has a greater impact on the disinfection process. Moreover, the interconnections between operational parameters in flow cell ultrasound treatment have an impact on treatment performance. The optimal operation of an unsubmerged reactor is associated with the geometry of the reactor structural design. The curve estimation confirms that the behaviour of cells inactivated to the treatment duration in multilayer perceptron yielded a regression line with a determination coefficient greater than 89%, together with a lower intercept as model bias fit a data set to the linear regression model behaviour. RMSE has given the average error between the experimental data and the predicted value. In addition, the residuals-predicted on the experimental model were not clear patterns and were considered a good fit model. Hence, this presents greater confidence in the linear regression model behaviour between predicted and observed data. The 60- minute treatment duration and cell inactivation in linear regression behaviour (p < 0.0001) and further extended treatment duration until 110 minutes led to the change in the behaviour of quadratic models (R 2 = 0.811). The increase in treatment duration with of more than 60 minutes appeared to reduce the death cell rate. The trend removal reduced the rapid disruption and generated a tailing phenomenon. It is important to note that the higher performance of the flow cell ultrasonic reactor on inactivation effect was referred to the sonication parameters. This resulted in the interaction between microbubbles and membrane cells with mechanical and chemical damage inactivation effects. Thus, the mechanical inactivation effects such as liquid microjets, shockwaves, acoustic streaming, and combinations of chemical cytotoxic effects through reactive oxygen species act as a pillar in the cell's inactivation effect. Meanwhile, oxidative radical-induced lipid oxidation was the primary target for membrane oxidation, and it was noted that oxidation was advantageous in a membrane because oxygen was more concentrated in the hydrophobic environment of lipid bilayers than in solution. Further, microscopy images and particle size analysis showed flow cell ultrasound treatment caused lethal effects due to mechanical damage to the cells and a proven tailing phenomenon during the treatment. Therefore, the flow cell ultrasonic reactor was an efficient sustainable disinfection technology towards increasing energy efficiency.