TORQUATO, F. P. L.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/8153120389870548; TORQUATO, Fernanda Patricia Lima.
Résumé:
The disinfection o f waters destined to human consumption requires the use of
safe and efficient methods in the inactivation o f pathogenic microorganisms and in the
generation o f by-products non harmful to the human health. The lack or inadequacy of
drinkable water supply, especially in rural areas, and small towns or villages, has been
aggravating the transmission of hydric vehicled diseases. Alternative disinfection
methods, characterized by their low costs and easy handling, have been being applied.
Within these stand out the SODIS (Solar Disinfection of Water) technology,
investigated in this research. For such, transparent PET bottles were used, filled up to 3A
of their capacity with water o f turbidity inferior to 30UNT, and polluted with bacteria
indicative o f fecal contamination and selected enteropathogenic bacteria, exposed from
4 to 6 hours to natural solar light, to the light of solar lamps and to artificial UV
radiation supplied by germicide lamps. For evaluation of the occurrence or not of the
restoration of the damage provoked in the DNA o f the microorganisms (bacterial
regrowth) by the solar radiation and the UV artificial radiation, studies o f bacterial
regrowth were accomplished 24 and 48 hours after the disinfection. The results
evidenced 100% of efficiency o f the natural solar light and of the solar lamps in the
destruction/inactivation o f the populations of S. typhimurium (ATCC 3985), Salmonella
spp, E. coli (ATCC 25922) and Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 25923). The technique
of SODIS appeared as a viable alternative technology of disinfection when the water
presents initial concentration from 103 to 105 CFU/lOOml, turbidity inferior to 30UNT
and is under climatic conditions that favor the synergic action between UV radiation
and heat. Although the germicide lamps possess strong bactericidal effect, there was no
inactivation o f the enteropathogenic bacteria present in the waters submitted to that
disinfecting agent. It was observed that inexistence of residual effect from the UV
radiation, as well as the great capacity of resistance of P. aeruginosa (ATCC 939)
favored the bacterial regrowth.