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Journal ArticleDOI

Bacterial adhesion and transport in porous media: role of the secondary energy minimum.

TLDR
The adhesion of a well-characterized Escherichia coli bacterial strain to quartz sediment grains in the presence of repulsive electrostatic interactions is systematically examined and supports the conclusion that the majority of bacterial deposition in the packed bed occurs in a secondary energy minimum.
Abstract
The adhesion of a well-characterized Escherichia coli bacterial strain to quartz sediment grains in the presence of repulsive electrostatic interactions is systematically examined. An increase in the ionic strength of the pore fluid results in an increase in bacterial attachment, despite DLVO calculations indicating a sizable electrostatic energy barrier to deposition. Bacterial deposition is likely occurring in the secondary energy minimum, which DLVO calculations indicate increases in depth with ionic strength. A decrease in the ionic strength of the pore fluid--thereby eliminating the secondary energy minimum--resulted in release of the majority of previously deposited bacteria, suggesting that these cells were deposited reversibly in the secondary minimum. Additionally, bacterial attachment to a quartz surface in a radial stagnation point flow system was absent at ionic strengths less than 0.01 M and resulted in attachment efficiencies over an order of magnitude lower than in the packed-bed column experiments at higher ionic strengths. Because of the hydrodynamics in the radial stagnation point flow system, this observation supports our conclusion that the majority of bacterial deposition in the packed bed occurs in a secondary energy minimum.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Biofouling of reverse osmosis membranes: Role of biofilm-enhanced osmotic pressure

TL;DR: “biofilm-enhanced osmotic pressure” plays a dominant role in RO biofouling, with scanning electron microscope images of dead cells and biofilm supporting these proposed mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deviation from the classical colloid filtration theory in the presence of repulsive DLVO interactions.

TL;DR: A dual deposition mode model is presented which considers the combined influence of "fast" and "slow" particle deposition and is shown to adequately describe both the spatial distribution of particles in the packed bed and the suspended particle concentration at the column effluent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contribution of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) to the sludge aggregation.

TL;DR: Through analyzing the interaction energy curves of sludge before and after the EPS extraction using the extended DLVO theory, it is found that both LB-E PS and TB-EPS have a substantial contribution to the sludge aggregation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breakdown of colloid filtration theory: role of the secondary energy minimum and surface charge heterogeneities.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the mechanisms and causes of deviation from the classical colloid filtration theory in the presence of repulsive Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) interactions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coupling of physical and chemical mechanisms of colloid straining in saturated porous media.

TL;DR: Observations suggest that the extent of colloid removal by straining is strongly coupled to solution chemistry.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mutual coagulation of colloidal dispersions

TL;DR: In this paper, a quantitative theory is presented which describes the kinetics of coagulation of colloidal systems containing more than one dispersed species, using the linear (Debye-Huckel) approximation for low surface potentials.
Book

Particle Deposition and Aggregation: Measurement, Modelling and Simulation

TL;DR: In this article, a unified approach to the measurement, modelling and simulation of these processes is presented, bringing together the disciplines of colloid and surface chemistry, hydrodynamics, and experimental and computational methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

The DLVO theory in microbial adhesion

TL;DR: The DLVO theory has been used as a qualitative model, but also in a quantitative way to calculate adhesion free energy changes involved in microbial adhesion as mentioned in this paper, which has been shown to be effective in predicting bacterial adhesion to various interfaces using the classical Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) theory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Approximate expressions for retarded van der waals interaction

TL;DR: Several approximations for the retarded van der Waals interaction between plates, between spheres, and for the sphere-plate system are considered in this paper, including simple unretarded Hamaker formulae, together with a correction factor which depends on the separation distance and the characteristic wavelength of the dispersion interaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling colloid attachment, straining, and exclusion in saturated porous media.

TL;DR: Numerical experiments indicated that increasing the colloid excluded volume of the pore space resulted in earlier breakthrough and higher peak effluent concentrations as a result of higher pore water velocities and lower residence times, respectively.
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