Inactivation Mechanisms of Escherichia coli in Simulants of Respiratory and Environmental Aerosol Droplets

Author:

Otero-Fernandez Mara1ORCID,Thomas Richard J.2ORCID,Oswin Henry3ORCID,Alexander Robert1ORCID,Haddrell Allen1,Reid Jonathan P.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Chemistry, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1TS, UK

2. Defence Science Technology Laboratory (DSTL), Porton Down, Salisbury SP4 0JQ, UK

3. School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane 4067, Australia

Abstract

The airborne transmission of disease relies on the ability of microbes to survive aerosol transport and, subsequently, cause infection when interacting with a host. The length of time airborne microorganisms remain infectious in aerosol droplets is a function of numerous variables. We present measurements of mass and heat transfer from liquid aerosol droplets combined with airborne survival data for Escherichia coli MRE162, an ACDP category 1 microorganism used as a model system, under a wide range of environmental conditions, droplet compositions and microbiological conditions. In tandem, these companion measurements demonstrate the importance of understanding the complex relationship between aerosol microphysics and microbe survival. Specifically, our data consist of the correlation of a wide range of physicochemical properties (e.g., evaporation rates, equilibrium water content, droplet morphology, compositional changes in droplet solute and gas phase, etc.), with airborne viability decay to infer the impact of aerosol microphysics on airborne bacterial survival. Thus, a mechanistic approach to support prediction of the survival of microorganisms in the aerosol phase as a function of biological, microphysical, environmental, and experimental (aerosol-generation and sampling) processes is presented. Specific findings include the following: surfactants do not increase bacteria stability in aerosol, while both the bacteria growth phase and bacteria concentration may affect the rate at which bacteria decay in aerosol.

Funder

Natural Environment Research (NCAS-NERC) council

Defence Science & Technology Laboratories

UK Ministry of Defence

EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Aerosol Science

EPSRC

Publisher

MDPI AG

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