Silver Nanowire-Modified Filter with Controllable Silver Ion Release for Point-of-Use Disinfection.
Wensi ChenJinyue JiangWenlong ZhangTing WangJianfeng ZhouChing-Hua HuangXing XiePublished in: Environmental science & technology (2019)
Waterborne diseases related to unsafe water are still major threats to public health in some developing countries and rural areas. Providing affordable and safe drinking water globally remains a great challenge in the coming decades. In this study, we develop a high-throughput and conductive silver nanowire (AgNW)-modified composite filter via depositing thin and ultralong AgNWs on a macroporous substrate. An electrochemical filtration cell (EFC) equipped with the composite filter achieves controllable Ag+ release at a μg L-1 level and superior bacterial inactivation performance (>6-log inactivation efficiency) with an operation voltage of only 1 V at a high flux of 100 m3 h-1 m-2. Under such operation conditions, each composite filter (effective area: 0.79 cm2) can treat at least 750 mL of the bacterial suspension (∼107 CFU mL-1 of Escherichia coli) with a low effluent Ag+ concentration below 50 μg L-1 and almost negligible energy consumption of only ∼70 J m-3.
Keyphrases
- drinking water
- gold nanoparticles
- public health
- high throughput
- escherichia coli
- silver nanoparticles
- room temperature
- single cell
- health risk assessment
- health risk
- quantum dots
- reduced graphene oxide
- wastewater treatment
- cell therapy
- ionic liquid
- risk assessment
- high resolution
- molecularly imprinted
- amino acid
- tissue engineering
- multidrug resistant
- cystic fibrosis
- label free
- liquid chromatography
- tandem mass spectrometry