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Secondary activation on plasma-activated water by plasma-treated cotton for restoring and enhancing disinfection effect.

Zifeng WangShenghang XuXiangyu WangDingxin LiuWanchun LiRusen ZhouQiuyi YuePengfei ZhangJishen ZhangHao ZhangLi GuoDandan PeiMingzhe Rong
Published in: Journal of hazardous materials (2024)
Plasma-activated water (PAW) is a novel antimicrobial agent with negligible toxicity and environmental burden, holding promise as an alternative to chemical disinfectants and antibiotics. In practice, liquid disinfectants are often soaked with cotton materials before further use. Rich in reducing functional groups on the surface, cotton will inevitably react with PAW, leading to the deterioration of PAW's functions. To resolve this issue, this work proposes a new concept of "secondary activation" for retaining and enhancing PAW's bioactivity, i.e., pre-treating cotton with air plasma before soaking PAW. For the first time, we find that the PAW absorbed by raw cotton completely loses its bactericidal effect, while plasma-treated cotton (PTC) restores the disinfection capacity and prolongs its effective duration. This restoration is attributed to the absorption of plasma-generated reactive species by cotton with oxidizing and nitrifying modifications on the fiber surface. Consequently, the concentrations of aqueous species in PAW increase rather than decrease after absorption by PTC. In addition, the PTC after 28-day storage can still enable PAW to achieve a bacterial reduction of ∼3 logs. This work identifies and addresses a crucial limitation in the disinfection application of PAW and elucidates the mechanism underlying PTC production and secondary activation of PAW.
Keyphrases
  • drinking water
  • primary care
  • healthcare
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • gene expression
  • machine learning
  • risk factors
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • risk assessment
  • big data
  • newly diagnosed