3.1. Optimization of Discharge Parameters
To optimize the treatment process in our system, experiments were carried out in which the energy stored in the capacitor and the interelectrode distance were varied while maintaining a constant capacitance. In these experiments, the water samples described above served as the working medium and were subjected to electrohydraulic treatment at different values of the interelectrode gap. The following parameter ranges were varied in the experiments: voltage U = 15–30 kV, capacitance C = 0.25 μF, and interelectrode gap l = 5–10 mm.
The calculated pulse energy E values are presented in
Table 4. Because the interelectrode gap and charging voltage were increased simultaneously in this experimental series, the present dataset does not allow the independent effects of gap length and voltage to be separated. Therefore, the observed trends should be interpreted cautiously, because the larger gap coincided with a higher charging voltage and hence a higher stored energy.
The faster inactivation observed at higher-voltage/larger-gap regimes should be interpreted as the effect of a combined high-intensity operating condition.
Based on the classification of electrohydraulic pulse regimes proposed by Yutkin, the following operating regimes can be distinguished:
High-energy regime (U ≥ 50 kV, C ≤ 0.1 μF): a short current pulse (<10 μs) is generated with maximum pressure amplitude and shock-wave intensity.
Medium-energy regime (U = 20–50 kV, C = 0.1–1 μF): provides a moderate shock effect at a higher pulse energy.
Low-energy regime (U < 20 kV, C > 1 μF): is characterized by a longer pulse (>10 μs) with the development of an arc phase, a weaker shock wave, but higher heat release and radical formation.
The system mainly operated in the “medium” regime (U up to 30 kV, C = 0.25 μF), with the possibility of switching to the high-energy regime by reducing the capacitance.
Table 5 presents the results of calculating the energy of a single pulse as a function of voltage.
3.2. Microbial Inactivation Dynamics
A key indicator of disinfection performance is the extent of microbial inactivation. Experimental data showed that plasma-pulse treatment provided rapid reduction in culturable indigenous microflora in wastewater samples to below the method detection limit under the selected operating conditions (
Figure 4).
The microbiological assessment was based on total microbial count determined by the heterotrophic plate count method and a qualitative sanitary-indicator test; therefore, the results characterize the reduction in culturable indigenous microflora under laboratory conditions. Broader validation requires tests with defined indicator organisms, including
Escherichia coli, total coliforms, enterococci, resistant model microorganisms, as well as regrowth and viable-but-nonculturable cell assessments. Plasma-pulse treatment reduced the total microbial count from approximately 1 × 10
5 CFU/mL to below the method detection limit. Under the low-intensity regime (15 kV, C = 0.25 μF, Ec = 28.1 J), this was achieved within 4 min, whereas under the high-intensity regime (30 kV, C = 0.25 μF, Ec = 112.5 J), the same level was reached within 2 min. This corresponds to conservative lower-bound values of LRV ≥ 5 and apparent inactivation rate constants of kapp ≥ 1.25 and ≥2.50 log10 min
−1, respectively. Thus, the high-intensity regime provided approximately a twofold increase in the apparent inactivation rate, which is consistent with previous studies showing that higher discharge energy can shorten the time required for microbial inactivation [
37,
38].
These results should be interpreted as the combined effect of voltage, interelectrode gap, stored energy, pulse exposure, and hydrodynamic contact rather than the isolated influence of a single discharge parameter. Possible deviations from ideal log-linear kinetics may be related to non-uniform exposure in the recirculation loop, particle shielding, heterogeneous microbial resistance, and transient cavitation intensity.
Based on the microbiological data, apparent log-reduction values and log-linear inactivation rate constants were calculated to compare the low- and high-intensity plasma-pulse regimes (
Table 6). Since the final TMC values reached the method detection limit, the calculated values should be interpreted as conservative lower-bound estimates.
The results show that the high-intensity plasma-pulse regime reduced culturable microorganisms to below the detection limit approximately twice as fast as the low-intensity regime. However, this difference should be interpreted as the combined effect of charging voltage, interelectrode gap, discharge stability, pulse exposure, and hydrodynamic contact rather than the isolated effect of stored energy alone.
An increase in pulsed discharge energy significantly accelerates the disinfection process, which is consistent with the general trend: higher-energy operating conditions may intensify mechanical and plasma-chemical effects, which can plausibly contribute to faster reduction in culturable microorganisms. It is known that cavitation processes can create extreme local conditions, including high pressures and temperatures in microzones, which are associated with microbial inactivation; however, quantitative linking of “pressure” to cell death in a specific system requires either direct measurements of the acoustic field or a computational model [
39]. In our experiments, even the mildest discharges resulted in complete bacterial inactivation after 4 min, whereas high-energy discharges reduced the HPC/TMC value to below the method detection limit (LOD = 1 CFU/mL) in less than 2 min for culturable microflora under the applied assay condition. After 3 min of treatment under any of the tested regimes, no viable microorganisms were detected within the sensitivity limits of the method used; further increase in treatment duration did not improve the result, indicating that an efficiency plateau had been reached. This suggests the existence of an optimal treatment time, which under our conditions was 3 min, beyond which further treatment is not justified in terms of energy consumption.
The key quantitative indicator of disinfection efficiency in this study was the total microbial count (TMC). The results obtained showed that plasma-pulse treatment caused a rapid decrease in microbial contamination, with a more pronounced effect observed under the regime with higher input pulse energy. Under the optimal treatment parameters, the reduction in TMC to a level below the detection threshold was achieved faster than under the milder regime, confirming the influence of discharge energetics on the rate of microflora inactivation. An additional sanitary-indicator test was qualitative in nature and was, therefore, used only as confirmatory evidence of the presence or absence of indicator sanitary microflora, without constructing quantitative curves.
In addition, a qualitative sanitary-microbiological assessment of the water samples was performed based on the indicator criterion of the presence or absence of indicator sanitary microflora. The results of this test were recorded only in qualitative form as “+” (detected) or “−” (not detected). Since this indicator was qualitative in nature, it was not converted into CFU/dm3 and was not used to construct kinetic dependences. In the present study, the quantitative assessment of disinfection efficiency was performed using the total microbial count (TMC).
3.3. Conductivity Evolution During Treatment
The effect of the specific electrical conductivity of water on the number of pulsed discharges was investigated.
Figure 5 shows the dependence of electrical conductivity on the number of pulses for different types of water, including drinking (tap) water and wastewater.
The graph in
Figure 5 shows the typical behavior of the electrical conductivity (specific electrical conductivity, SEC) of water samples under successive pulsed electrical discharges. In the initial treatment period, a decrease in conductivity is observed: for relatively clean drinking water, the minimum is reached after approximately 50 pulses, whereas for more mineralized wastewater, it is reached after approximately 100 pulses. It was experimentally established that the maximum decrease in sample conductivity occurs at about 50–60 pulses. Such a decrease in salt content indicates the occurrence of processes that remove some dissolved ions from the water, possibly due to coagulation or salt precipitation under the action of shock waves and cavitation [
40,
41,
42]. At the same time, slight water heating occurs, but its effect is compensated by the decrease in ion concentration (TDS); the measurements were performed with temperature compensation to 25 °C, so the temporary temperature increase did not distort the result.
After reaching the minimum conductivity point, a further increase in the number of pulses leads to a gradual increase in water conductivity (
Figure 5). This is due to the fact that more powerful and prolonged pulsed impacts begin to decompose organic substances and microbial cells, releasing additional ions into the solution. Indeed, it was noted that the subsequent increase in conductivity may be explained by an increase in the concentration of microbial fragments due to their degradation, as well as by the formation of smaller ions from organic compounds [
43,
44]. Under prolonged pulsed treatment, the decomposition of organic matter and microbial cells may release additional ionic species into solution, which can lead to a subsequent increase in conductivity. As a result, after 100–200 pulses, conductivity may return to its initial level or even exceed it. For example, for wastewater, after 100 pulses the decrease in conductivity ceased, and a subsequent increase in SEC was observed. Similar non-linear effects have also been reported by other researchers: during prolonged treatment, conductivity fluctuations were observed depending on the initial condition of the water and the presence of microflora [
45,
46,
47].
For comparison with previous studies, it should be noted that studies on plasma activation of water often report an increase in conductivity under discharge treatment [
45]. For example, Van Nguyen et al. [
48], when treating surface water with cold plasma, observed an increase in nitrate/nitrite concentrations and a decrease in pH, accompanied by an increase in electrical conductivity, which is considered a side effect. In their experiment, conductivity after treatment increased from 98 to 592 μS/cm, i.e., by more than 500%, which significantly exceeded the initial level. In the present study, the opposite trend was observed during the early treatment stage: the temperature-compensated electrical conductivity decreased by 3–5%. This decrease should be interpreted as an integral physicochemical response of the treated water rather than as direct evidence of specific impurity removal, because conductivity measurements alone cannot identify which ionic species were removed, transformed, or generated during plasma-pulse exposure. A similar decrease in conductivity after electro-pulse treatment has also been reported by other researchers. In particular, it has been reported that electric-discharge treatment of water leads to an increase in pH, an increase in ORP, and a decrease in conductivity, which correlates with improved wastewater treatment efficiency.
The effect of the specific electrical conductivity of water on the energy of a single pulsed discharge was also investigated (
Figure 6).
Figure 6 shows the dependence of water electrical conductivity on the energy of a single high-voltage pulse (at a fixed number of pulses). The non-monotonic conductivity response indicates that plasma-pulse treatment affects the ionic balance of the water through several competing processes. The initial decrease in σ25 may be associated with temporary immobilization, coagulation, precipitation, adsorption, or deposition of ionic species on electrode and reactor surfaces. In contrast, the subsequent increase in conductivity at higher energy input or prolonged exposure may result from plasma-chemical formation of dissolved products, release of ions from disrupted microbial cells and organic matter, formation of nitrogen-containing species, gas dissolution, or electrode erosion. Therefore, σ25 should be considered a general indicator of physicochemical transformation rather than a selective marker of water purification. The curve was U-shaped: as the discharge energy increased from 20–30 J to about 112.5 J per pulse, the electrical conductivity of the treated water decreased and reached a minimum. At higher energy inputs, the conductivity increased again, indicating that there is an optimal discharge-energy range for maximizing the removal of dissolved species. The greatest decrease in TDS (7% of the initial value) was achieved at an energy of about 112–115 J per pulse; at lower energies (30–40 J), conductivity decreased only slightly (by 1–3%), since the discharge probably did not generate a sufficient number of cavitation bubbles and reactive radicals for effective water purification. When the energy was increased to 100 J, the purification effect on salt content weakened: the conductivity of the water increased and could exceed the initial value.
As the results show, increasing the interelectrode gap, and consequently the discharge energy, initially improves the efficiency of water disinfection, but excessively high energy does not lead to proportional improvement.
Physically, this can be explained by the balance between enhancement of the desired effect and undesirable side effects at higher energies. On the one hand, increasing the pulse energy intensifies the shock-wave effect and cavitation generation, which promotes coagulation and precipitation of salts from the solution. In addition, the higher-energy regime may accelerate the reduction in culturable microorganisms under the tested conditions, preventing them from releasing ions into the solution; in other words, this accelerates the achievement of reduction in culturable microorganisms below the detection limit without increasing salt content. On the other hand, at very high energies, the plasma channel in water is strongly heated; a local temperature increase of 1 °C raises electrical conductivity by approximately 2%. Despite the automatic temperature compensation of the instruments, strong discharges may lead to additional heating and evaporation, which complicates accurate measurements. A more important factor is the plasma-chemical formation of new dissolved substances. At high voltages and energies, reactive oxidants such as •OH, O•, and H
2O
2 may be formed in water and may contribute to organic-matter transformation and the formation of additional dissolved ionic species, for example, transforming nitrogen-containing organic compounds into nitrates [
49]. As a result, additional ions (NO
3−, NO
2−, etc.) appear, increasing the mineralization of the water [
48]. At the same time, electrode erosion and dissolution of gases from the plasma are also possible, which further increase the salt content. These effects lead to an increase in water conductivity at very high pulse energies, counteracting the initial decrease.
The literature data confirm this pattern. For example, studies on plasma oxidation have reported that more intense treatments lead to an increase in nitrate concentration and, consequently, to a significant increase in electrical conductivity and a decrease in the pH of treated water [
49]. In the cited study, the increase in conductivity was several hundred percent above the initial level. Our results show more moderate changes: at the optimal discharge energies (112.5 J), conductivity decreases by 5–7%, whereas at the maximum tested energies (130–150 J), it either returns to the initial level or increases slightly (by 2–5%).
The effect of treatment time on electrical conductivity was also investigated (
Figure 7).
Treatment time is closely related to the number of pulses: at a fixed pulse repetition frequency, a longer duration is equivalent to a greater number of pulses [
49]. Thus, the pattern of conductivity change is largely similar to the trends shown in
Figure 6. As can be seen from
Figure 7, during the first 1–4 min of treatment, the electrical conductivity of the water decreases. For wastewater (with a higher initial salt content of 1300 μS/cm), the minimum value (1200 μS/cm, a decrease of 7–8%) is reached after approximately 4 min of treatment, which corresponds to 432 pulses. For tap water (initial conductivity 780 μS/cm), the decrease is less pronounced (about 3–4%), and the minimum value (760 μS/cm) is reached more rapidly, after about 1.5–2 min (approximately 162–216 pulses). In addition, during the first few minutes, the discharges effectively inactivate the water microflora, preventing the further release of metabolic products into the solution.
With longer exposure (more than 4–5 min, >432–540 pulses), the trend changes, and the electrical conductivity begins to increase. The wastewater curve in
Figure 7 shows that after 4 min, the conductivity starts to rise, and by the 8th minute, it almost returns to its initial value (1300 μS/cm). For tap water, the increase occurs earlier: after 2 min, the conductivity begins to rise, and after 6–8 min, it returns to the initial level (0.80 mS/cm). Prolonged treatment negates the salt-removal effect. The reasons for this are consistent with those described above: the accumulation of products of organic decomposition, the release of ions from destroyed cells, and intensive plasma-chemical reactions in water begin to prevail over the salt-removal effect. In other words, the system reaches a saturation point, after which further disinfection is accompanied by increased mineralization. In some cases, oscillatory changes in electrical conductivity were observed during prolonged treatment, associated with biological processes in the water, but on average, there is a tendency for conductivity to increase after prolonged discharge treatment.
It should also be noted that the conductivity reduction effect is partly temporary. After the pulsed treatment is stopped, the water gradually restores the lost dissolved substances. For example, recarbonation of water by carbon dioxide from the air is possible, which leads to the dissolution of carbonate precipitates and an increase in TDS. In addition, when the treated water comes into contact with the atmosphere and the container walls, ions from the surrounding environment may enter it, returning the system to an equilibrium state. Therefore, to achieve a stable treatment effect, it may be necessary to combine pulsed treatment with a subsequent filtration stage to remove the precipitate.
In many studies where plasma treatment of water was carried out for a long time, an increase in conductivity over time rather than a decrease was observed. For example, when distilled water was treated with an atmospheric plasma discharge for 30 min, its conductivity increased from zero to 529 μS/cm, accompanied by significant acidification (pH decreased to 3) due to the accumulation of acids (nitrates, nitrites, etc.) [
19]. In our case, the initial water had a neutral pH and some alkalinity, and the plasma-pulse treatment occurred in a water volume that initially increased pH and reduced salt content [
50]. Thus, short-term treatment produces a positive effect, namely, a decrease in mineralization, whereas very prolonged treatment in the presence of air similarly begins to cause acidification and an increase in electrical conductivity. Under our conditions, the optimal pulsed-treatment time is several minutes, which is sufficient for water disinfection (a >99% reduction in bacterial counts) while simultaneously reducing electrical conductivity by 3–8%. Further increase in duration is impractical from the standpoint of water quality, since the content of dissolved substances begins to rise again. However, the mechanistic interpretation of conductivity changes remains limited by the absence of ion-specific and surface-composition analyses. In the present study, ion chromatography, ICP-MS/ICP-OES analysis of dissolved metals, alkalinity and carbonate/bicarbonate measurements, DOC analysis, pH/ORP evolution, and XRD or SEM-EDS characterization of possible electrode deposits were not performed. Consequently, the proposed pathways of ion immobilization, precipitation, nitrogen-species formation, organic-matter transformation, and electrode-related ion release should be regarded as plausible mechanisms requiring targeted experimental verification.
3.4. Chemical Analysis
To evaluate accompanying physicochemical changes in the wastewater matrix, COD, color, A254, and ammonium concentration were determined before and after plasma-pulse treatment. These indicators were used to assess organic-load reduction, transformation of colored compounds, changes in UV-absorbing organic structures, and ammonium conversion. The data presented in
Table 7 correspond to the wastewater experiment performed under the following conditions: U = 30 kV, C = 0.25 μF, interelectrode gap l = 10 mm, pulse frequency f = 1.8 Hz, treatment time t = 2 min, treated volume Vtot = 10 L, and number of pulses N = 216, number of passes through the 1 L high-voltage cell Npass = 12, and calculated capacitor-stored energy Ec = 112.5 J pulse
−1. COD, color, A254, and NH
4+ were used only as screening indicators of wastewater-quality changes. These measurements do not represent a complete chemical mass balance. Therefore, COD reduction should be interpreted as a decrease in oxidizable matter or organic-matter transformation, not as direct evidence of mineralization. Similarly, the decrease in NH
4+ should be interpreted as ammonium transformation rather than nitrogen removal, because NO
2−, NO
3−, total nitrogen, and dissolved organic nitrogen were not measured.
COD decreased from 260 to 120 mg O
2/L, corresponding to a 53.8% reduction, indicating a substantial decrease in oxidizable organic matter after plasma-pulse treatment. This agrees with previous studies reporting effective plasma-assisted degradation of organic pollutants through reactive oxygen species without chemical reagents [
48]. However, since TOC was not measured, COD reduction should be interpreted as organic-matter transformation rather than complete mineralization. The color value decreased by 61.1%, suggesting degradation of colored organic structures and chromophoric groups, which is consistent with plasma-based color-removal studies [
51]. A254 decreased by 52.3%, indicating transformation of aromatic, conjugated, and high-molecular-weight UV-absorbing organic compounds; similar decreases in UV absorbance have been linked to radical-induced degradation of complex organic matter [
52]. The NH
4+ concentration decreased by 52.9%, but this should be interpreted as ammonium transformation rather than direct nitrogen removal, because plasma processes may convert NH
4+ into NO
2− and NO
3− [
53]. Therefore, future studies should include TOC, full UV–Vis spectra, ion chromatography for NO
2−/NO
3−, and total nitrogen analysis to establish carbon and nitrogen mass balances.
3.5. Energy Metrics
The system-level electrical energy consumption for the 2 min treatment cycle was 0.0667 kWh, based on a nominal power input of 2 kW and a treated water volume of 10 L (0.010 m3). This corresponds to a specific energy input (SEI) of 6.7 kWh/m3 for the tested operating mode.
For the wastewater matrix, the initial total microbial count was approximately 1 × 105 CFU/mL, whereas the final value decreased to below the method detection limit (LOD = 1 CFU/mL) after treatment. Under the conservative assumption Ct = LOD, this corresponds to a minimum 5-log reduction in microbial load. Accordingly, the estimated electrical energy per order (EEO) was 1.34 kWh/m3/order. These values characterize the system-level energy demand of the tested operating mode. It should be noted that the reported SEI and EEO values are based on the total electrical input to the system, whereas the capacitor-stored energy values reported elsewhere in this study characterize the nominal pulse energy before discharge rather than the energy directly measured in the discharge channel or transferred to the liquid.
In studies [
54] using pulsed corona discharge in a flow-through mode for drinking water treatment, the reported EEO values ranged from 20 to 86 kWh/m
3/order for the removal of pathogens and persistent contaminants. By comparison, the EEO estimated in the present study was 1.34 kWh/m
3/order for the tested wastewater matrix and operating conditions. Similarly, studies on cold DBD plasma for the removal of organic pollutants report SEI/EEO values below 10 kWh/m
3, depending on the specific pollutant and treatment conditions, reflecting the potential of low-energy methods for certain water-treatment applications [
55].
It should be noted that the Ec values used in this work characterize the energy stored in the capacitor before the pulse, rather than the energy directly transferred to the water.
To clarify this distinction, the experimentally tested 30 kV regime was further evaluated by separating the capacitor-stored energy, the system-level wall-input energy, and the actual delivered energy to the discharge channel and liquid. The main energy-balance indicators for the treatment of 10 L of water for 2 min at U = 30 kV, C = 0.25 μF, and f = 1.8 Hz are summarized in
Table 8.
It is important to distinguish between capacitor-stored energy, wall-input energy, and energy actually delivered to the liquid. The reported SEI and EEO values are system-level estimates based on nominal wall input. Time-resolved voltage-current waveforms were not measured; therefore, the delivered energy to the discharge channel and liquid could not be directly determined.
Table 8 presents different values of the input parameters. These options provide an understanding of how to optimize the parameters in order to achieve efficient water treatment while balancing energy consumption.
Table 9 presents theoretical calculations based on capacitor-stored energy and system-level electrical input; these scenarios were not all experimentally tested in the present study. For engineering interpretation, three different energy levels must be distinguished: (i) capacitor-stored energy, calculated as Ec = 0.5 CU
2; (ii) system-level wall-input energy, estimated from the electrical power consumption and treatment time; and (iii) the actual energy delivered to the discharge channel and liquid, which requires time-resolved voltage-current diagnostics. In the present study, Ec and Ewall were evaluated, whereas the delivered discharge energy was not directly measured. Therefore, the reported SEI and EEO values should be interpreted as system-level estimates rather than intrinsic discharge-channel efficiencies.
The theoretical scenario analysis was used only to illustrate the sensitivity of capacitor-stored energy and estimated SEI to voltage and capacitance. These scenarios should not be interpreted as experimentally validated operating regimes. Overall, plasma-pulse water treatment [
56,
57,
58] may require higher specific energy input than some conventional disinfection methods when applied to large-volume municipal water treatment. Therefore, the process should not be considered a direct universal replacement for established disinfection technologies. However, its engineering value lies in its reagent-free operation and in the simultaneous action of shock waves, cavitation, local UV emission, and reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. This combination may be useful for complex wastewater matrices, resistant microorganisms, or persistent organic contaminants, where conventional treatment alone may be insufficient.
The influence of energy input on treatment efficiency may also be associated with changes in plasma-induced cavitation-flow regimes. In this context, data-driven methods such as Dynamic Mode Decomposition (DMD) could be useful for classifying dominant flow structures from high-speed images, acoustic signals, pressure traces, or discharge waveforms [
59]. Such analysis would help relate pulse energy, cavitation dynamics, microbial inactivation, conductivity evolution, and energy consumption.
From an engineering perspective, plasma-pulse treatment should be considered primarily as an advanced treatment or pre-treatment stage rather than as a stand-alone large-volume disinfection process. Possible applications include post-biological polishing after A2/O treatment, side-stream treatment of recalcitrant wastewater, or pre-treatment before adsorption/catalytic filtration. The main scale-up bottlenecks include uncertainty in residence-time distribution, hydraulic short-circuiting, electrode depletion and material release, uncertainty in actual delivered discharge energy, heat release, pulse-generator efficiency, and maintenance of stable discharge conditions in complex water matrices. Future pilot-scale studies should, therefore, include tracer-based HRT measurements, CFD analysis of the high-voltage cell, time-resolved voltage-current waveform diagnostics, electrode mass-loss measurements, and ion-specific by-product monitoring.
3.6. Comparison with Literature Sources
Table 10 presents the parameters and water disinfection efficiency achieved in our work and reported in other studies published between 2020 and 2024. The results obtained in our study, namely, complete bacterial inactivation within a few minutes without the use of reagents, are comparable with the findings of other authors. For example, Malyushevskaya et al. [
44] showed that electrical discharge in the cavitation regime can significantly enhance the effect of low chlorine doses: at an energy consumption of 25 kJ/L, the addition of only 0.4–0.5 mg/L chlorine ensures reliable water disinfection while shortening the treatment time compared with conventional chlorination. Terato et al. successfully applied high-voltage pulsed discharges for water sterilization: a discharge with cavitation effectively destroyed
Escherichia coli, and even the radiation-resistant
D. radiodurans showed high sensitivity to plasma treatment [
26]. At the same time, spores, for example, those of
B. subtilis, proved to be more resistant and required more intensive treatment. These observations confirm that the mechanisms of microbial destruction by plasma are complex: along with oxidative processes, significant disruption of cell membranes occurs due to shock-wave and cavitation effects.
Other authors report comparable disinfection efficiency under somewhat different conditions. In the work of Quintana-Terriza et al. [
27], a 4–5 log reduction in the viability of Enterococcus faecalis, a fecal indicator bacterium with high environmental resistance, was achieved after 15 min of plasma treatment at 1–8 kV and 40 Hz. At the same time, more than 85% of the antibiotic tetracycline was degraded in the same system, demonstrating the possibility of simultaneous removal of microorganisms and organic pollutants. On the other hand, Zhou et al. [
45] proposed an alternative approach, the so-called locally enhanced electric field treatment (LEEFT) using nanostructured electrodes, in which bacteria can be inactivated at lower voltages, at only a few volts, due to increased field non-uniformity, without reagents. Mechanical and oxidative destruction of bacterial membranes has also been confirmed by other researchers. For example, electroporation methods based on nanoparticle electrodes produce a similar inactivation effect without the use of chemical reagents [
44].
An important factor in the efficiency of plasma methods is the generation of reactive radicals. It is known that the concentration of •OH and other oxidants directly depends on the discharge regime. For example, Fang et al. [
47] showed that combining electrical discharge with acoustic cavitation increases radical yield and accelerates the degradation of organic pollutants. In a recent study using a gas-liquid Venturi reactor, the introduction of a small oxygen flow rate of 3 L/min led to a sixfold increase in •OH radical yield with only a minimal increase in energy consumption, which significantly enhanced the oxidative capacity of the plasma. As a result, in this hybrid process, nearly complete, 99%, degradation of a persistent organic dye was achieved within 2 min at a specific energy consumption of only 0.26 kWh/m
3/order. Our experiments, conducted without gas injection, showed that the oxidants generated by the discharge in water were sufficient for reduction in culturable microorganisms to below the method detection limit, as evidenced by color change and odor removal, as shown in
Table 10. Nevertheless, the presented literature data indicate a path for further efficiency improvement; for example, the introduction of oxygen or ozone into the discharge zone may increase •OH yield and reduce the energy cost of disinfection.
As shown in
Table 10, plasma and electrical-discharge systems differ substantially in discharge configuration, target microorganisms, water matrix, exposure time, and energy reporting. The present system achieved rapid reagent-free reduction in culturable indigenous microflora in a 10 L recirculating reactor; however, its energy performance should be interpreted as a system-level estimate rather than as directly measured delivered discharge energy. Compared with conventional UV-based disinfection, plasma-pulse treatment is unlikely to be the lowest-energy option for low-turbidity water, but it may be advantageous for complex wastewater matrices where simultaneous microbial inactivation, oxidation, cavitation-induced disruption, and reduced chemical addition are required.