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Clarification of small volume microbial suspensions in an ultrasonic standing wave
Authors:Limaye  & Coakley
Institution:School of Pure and Applied Biology, University of Wales Cardiff, Cardiff, UK
Abstract:The removal of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Escherichia coli from 2·5 ml suspensions in ultrasonic standing wave formed at 1 or 3 MHz has been characterized. The standing wave was set up by a plane transducer and reflector mounted in the vertical plane. Cells in the ultrasonic field first concentrated in vertical planes at half wavelength separations. The ultrasound was then pulsed to allow clumps of concentrated cells to sediment in a controlled way during the short 'off' intervals. Yeast removal from suspension at a concentration of 3 × 109 ml?1 (14% volume v/v) was 99·5% in a total time of 4·5 min. Almost total (99·5%) clarification of prokaryote ( E. coli ) suspension was achieved here for the first time in a standing wave field. The clarification of a 1·3 × 1011 ml?1 (16% v/v) E. coli suspension occurred over 11·5 min. The period decreased to 7 min in the presence of a polycationic flocculant, polyethyleneimine. The implications of the results for design of systems to further reduce clarification times are discussed. Removal efficiency for both S. cerevisiae and E. coli decreased with decrease in cell concentration. This concentration dependence is shown not to be simply a consequence of acoustic interaction between single cells. Flow cytometry of stained cells detected no loss of cell viability arising from the ultrasonic procedure.
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