Open access
Date
2022-10-24Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
Outbreaks of waterborne viruses pose a massive threat to human health, claiming the lives of hundreds of thousands of people every year. Adsorption-based filtration offers a promising facile and environmentally friendly approach to help provide safe drinking water to a world population of almost 8 billion people, particularly in communities that lack the infrastructure for largescale facilities. The search for a material that can effectively trap viruses has been mainly driven by a top-down approach, in which old and new materials have been tested for this purpose. Despite substantial advances, finding a material that achieves this crucial goal and meets all associated challenges remains elusive. We suggest that the road forward should strongly rely on a complementary bottom up approach based on our fundamental understanding of virus interactions at interfaces. We review the state-of-the-art physicochemical knowledge of the forces that drive the adsorption of viruses at solid-water interfaces. Compared to other nanometric colloids, viruses have heterogeneous surface chemistry and diverse morphologies. We advocate that advancing our understanding of virus interactions would require describing their physicochemical properties using novel descriptors that reflect their heterogeneity and diversity. Several other related topics are also addressed, including the effect of coadsorbates on virus adsorption, virus inactivation at interfaces, and experimental considerations to ensure well-grounded research results. We finally conclude with selected examples of materials that made notable advances in the field. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000578476Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
JACS AuVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
American Chemical SocietySubject
waterborne viruses; adsorption-based filtration; viruses at solid-water interfaces; physicochemical properties of viruses; point-of-use water treatment; multi-adsorbate systems; virus inactivation at interfaces; virus trapsOrganisational unit
03857 - Mezzenga, Raffaele / Mezzenga, Raffaele
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