Particle Association Effects on Microbial Indicator Concentrations for CSO Disinfection

Author(s):  
Joyce M. Perdek ◽  
Michael Borst
Keyword(s):  
2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Prashant S. Wani ◽  
Michael A. Rowland ◽  
Alex Ondracek ◽  
Eric J. Deeds ◽  
Jeroen Roelofs

2005 ◽  
Vol 71 (2) ◽  
pp. 1072-1078 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristin E. Searcy ◽  
Aaron I. Packman ◽  
Edward R. Atwill ◽  
Thomas Harter

ABSTRACT The association of Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts with suspended particles can alter the oocysts' effective physical properties and influence their transport in aquatic systems. To assess this behavior, C. parvum oocysts were mixed with various suspended sediments under a variety of water chemical conditions, and the resulting settling of the oocysts was observed. Direct microscopic observations showed that oocysts attached to suspended sediments. Settling column and batch experiments demonstrated that oocysts are removed from suspension at a much higher rate when associated with sediments. The rate of oocyst sedimentation depended primarily on the type of sediment with which the oocysts were mixed. Changes in background water conditions had a relatively small impact on the extent of oocyst-particle association and the resulting oocyst deposition. We believe that the ubiquitous association of C. parvum oocysts with suspended particles enhances the sedimentation of oocysts in natural waters and that this interaction should generally be considered when predicting the migration of pathogens in the environment.


The evidence for the airborne spread of foot-and-mouth disease during outbreaks in Europe between the turn of the century and the late 1960s is reviewed. The early experimental evidence is also outlined. More recent experimental investigation is then described in detail, including the procedures used to quantify airborne foot-and-mouth disease virus levels excreted by different susceptible species, the probably origin of this virus, the times of maximum virus release, the influence of virus strain and the nature of virus—aerosol particle association. Further experiments are described in which the influence of environmental factors such as ultraviolet light, relative humidity and pollutants on the survival of foot-and-mouth virus in aerosols has been examined. Finally, the extent of knowledge about the amounts of foot-and-mouth disease virus required to infect susceptible livestock by the airborne route is discussed.


2009 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 481-489 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dong Li ◽  
Stephen A. Craik ◽  
Daniel W. Smith ◽  
Miodrag Belosevic

2014 ◽  
Vol 63 ◽  
pp. 199-208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fiona Lynch ◽  
Steven Tomlinson ◽  
Enzo A. Palombo ◽  
Ian H. Harding

2013 ◽  
Vol 58 ◽  
pp. 56-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yini Ma ◽  
Timothy R. Filley ◽  
Cliff T. Johnston ◽  
Susan E. Crow ◽  
Katalin Szlavecz ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 674 ◽  
pp. 433-463 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANTONIN EDDI ◽  
ERIC SULTAN ◽  
JULIEN MOUKHTAR ◽  
EMMANUEL FORT ◽  
MAURICE ROSSI ◽  
...  

On a vertically vibrating fluid interface, a droplet can remain bouncing indefinitely. When approaching the Faraday instability onset, the droplet couples to the wave it generates and starts propagating horizontally. The resulting wave–particle association, called a walker, was shown previously to have remarkable dynamical properties, reminiscent of quantum behaviours. In the present article, the nature of a walker's wave field is investigated experimentally, numerically and theoretically. It is shown to result from the superposition of waves emitted by the droplet collisions with the interface. A single impact is studied experimentally and in a fluid mechanics theoretical approach. It is shown that each shock emits a radial travelling wave, leaving behind a localized mode of slowly decaying Faraday standing waves. As it moves, the walker keeps generating waves and the global structure of the wave field results from the linear superposition of the waves generated along the recent trajectory. For rectilinear trajectories, this results in a Fresnel interference pattern of the global wave field. Since the droplet moves due to its interaction with the distorted interface, this means that it is guided by a pilot wave that contains a path memory. Through this wave-mediated memory, the past as well as the environment determines the walker's present motion.


2015 ◽  
Vol 29 (S1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Prashant Wani ◽  
Michael Rowland ◽  
Alex Ondracek ◽  
Eric Deeds ◽  
Jeroen Roelofs

1981 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 223-241
Author(s):  
H.G. Dickinson

The unusual content of the plastids characteristic of male meiosis and microsporogenesis in Lilium henryi has been investigated using enzymic digestion of material prepared for electron microscopy. Apart from membranous tubules and osmiophilic droplets, commonly regarded as normal constituents of the stroma of undifferentiated plastids, these organelles contained a single conspicuous association between membrane and particulate material and wefts of filaments. Enzymic digestion revealed the membrane-particle association (MPA) to contain RNA and some protein, and the filaments to be entirely proteinaceous. The use of DNase on this material proved both unreliable and, on occasions, unspecific, so no new information has emerged as to the disposition of DNA within these organelles. Many of the plastids divide immediately after meiosis and the MPAs normally divide in step with the organelles. The activities of the MPA and those of the filaments are discussed in terms of changes in the organelle population as a whole, and also in consideration of the fundamental events occurring elsewhere in the cells during the alternation from the diploid sporophyte to the haploid gametophyte.


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