

Author: Peccia Jordan Werth Holly M. Miller Shelly Hernandez Mark
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISSN: 1521-7388
Source: Aerosol Science and Technology, Vol.35, Iss.3, 2001-09, pp. : 728-740
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Abstract
Ultraviolet germicidal irradiation (UVGI) as an engineering control against infectious bioaerosols necessitates a clear understanding of environmental effects on inactivation rates. The response of aerosolized Serratia marcescens, Bacillus subtilis, and Mycobacterium parafortuitum to ultraviolet irradiation was assessed at different relative humidity (RH)levels in a 0.8 m3 completely-mixed chamber. Bioaerosol response was characterized by physical factors including median cell aerodynamic diameter and cell water sorption capacity and by natural decay and UV-induced inactivation rate as determined by direct microscopic counts and standard plate counts. All organisms tested sorbed water from the atmosphere at RH levels between 20% and 95% (up to 70% of dry cell mass at 95% RH); however, no concomitant change in median aerodynamic diameter in this same RH range was observed. Variations in ultraviolet spherical irradiance were minor and not statistically significant in the 20-95% RH range. Cell water sorption and inactivation response was similar for each of the pure cultures tested: when RH exceeded approximately 50%, sorption increased markedly and a sharp concurrent drop in UV-induced inactivation rate was observed.
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