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Article Dans Une Revue International Journal of Chemical Reactor Engineering Année : 2008

SFGP 2007: Microbial growth onto filter media used in air treatment devices

Résumé

This work deals with microbial growth onto filter media and focuses on the ability of microbial communities to proliferate onto filter media. Two microorganism types are studied: microorganisms from activated sludge of wastewater treatment plant (SM) and a toluene specific consortium (TSC). The filter media considered for this study contain activated carbon fibres (ACF), combined volatile organic compounds (VOC), particles treatment purposes, activated carbon fibres felt (ACFF) and activated carbon and cellulose fibres felt (AC(2)F(2)). Using a static growth procedure during 10 days under 100 % relative humidity, artificially contaminated filters are submitted to microbial colonisation. The final concentration of microorganisms per gram of filter have been assessed using a method developed in the lab, based on filter protein content assay. The average surface charge of inocula and filter's fibres are measured to assess the influence of microorganisms adhesion on contamination. The influence of soot particles on TSC proliferation onto AC(2)F(2) filter is then studied. Zeta measures enable the assessment of the implication of soot in microorganisms adhesion onto filter fibres. Consequences of microbial contamination on filter permeability and downstream particles released have then been assessed in a filtration device. Results demonstrate a better resistance of AC(2)F(2) to microbial colonisation. However, SM have more difficulties to proliferate on ACFF than TSC, whereas SM colonise easier AC(2)F(2) than TSC. Charge surface assay has defined an optimal electrostatic compatibility for TSC and AC(2)F(2) and a minimum for SM and ACFF. When soot is added to TSC solution before introduction in AC(2)F(2), high contamination shapes were observed whereas only a slight one occur without soot addition. Zeta potential measures show favourable charge conditions for adhesion of soot on AC(2)F(2) fibres and TSC on soot particles. The soot may thus have played an interface role in microbial adhesion onto media. This means that electrostatic compatibility between particles is a good approach for assessing microbial adhesion onto filters but could not explain the whole mechanism of microbial proliferation. Other parameters like nutrition preferences are certainly involved. The contamination have induced filter characteristics modification. Permeability have decreased until 20 % with microbial concentration. Colonised filters have released up to 450 microbial particles/cm3. Such a release was only observed when AC(2)F(2) was contaminated with fungi using spore as the reproduction vector (inoculum containing TSC and soot).
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Dates et versions

hal-00878486 , version 1 (01-02-2023)

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Jean-Christophe Bonnevie Perrier, Laurence Le Coq, Yves Andres, Pierre Le Cloirec. SFGP 2007: Microbial growth onto filter media used in air treatment devices. International Journal of Chemical Reactor Engineering, 2008, 6, ⟨10.2202/1542-6580.1675⟩. ⟨hal-00878486⟩
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