New Journal of Physics (Jan 2012)

Bactericidal action of cold atmospheric plasma in solution

  • V Boxhammer,
  • G E Morfill,
  • J R Jokipii,
  • T Shimizu,
  • T Klämpfl,
  • Y-F Li,
  • J Köritzer,
  • J Schlegel,
  • J L Zimmermann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/14/11/113042
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 11
p. 113042

Abstract

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In this study different influences on the bactericidal effect of cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) were investigated intensively. In detail, different initial densities of Escherichia coli cells and different treatment times of up to 8 min were studied. The results show that up to densities of 10 ^5 cells per 20 μ l high reduction rates of up to 5 log can be achieved in less than 3 min of CAP application. In contrast, for higher cell densities almost no reduction was measured for CAP treatment times of up to 8 min. To understand this data in detail, a theoretical model was developed. This model starts from the premise that bacteria are able to some degree to neutralize reactive species and that accordingly the bactericidal effect depends on the bacterial concentration. A further purpose of this study was to analyze the contribution of reactive oxygen and also reactive nitrogen species—produced by the CAP—to the bactericidal effect. We therefore measured nitrites, nitrates and hydrogen peroxide—products of chemical reactions between the species produced by the CAP and the liquid. The evidence of nitric oxide (NO) uptake in bacteria and the corresponding reference experiments with hydrogen peroxide and a chemical NO donor clearly show that the bactericidal effect of CAP is related to a combination of oxidative and nitrosative effects.