
Device That
Reduces Poultry Dust Has Added BenefitBy Sharon Durham January 8, 2002An electrostatic system that reduces
airborne dust and microorganisms in poultry houses could also help sterilize
Salmonella and other pathogenic bacteria in the dust,
Agricultural Research Service scientists
report. Thats one added benefit of the system developed by ARS scientist
Bailey Mitchell,
who initially developed it in Athens, Ga. The system uses an electrostatic
charge to trap airborne dust that harbors the organisms. Since the initial studies in the early 1990s, Mitchell has found in new lab
studies that the electrostatic charge seems to show a strong sterilizing effect
on both airborne and surface Salmonella and other pathogenic bacteria.
The kill rate on airborne and surface Salmonella enteritidis at close
range has been 95 percent or more in a research setting. Ongoing work is
necessary to determine efficacy in the commercial sector. The system also has reduced biofilms up to 99.8 percent when used at close
range. Biofilms are formed by pathogenic bacteria that stick to surfaces and
then cover themselves with a protective coating. Scientists are still
determining how much electrostatic charge is required to kill airborne and
surface Salmonella and other pathogenic bacteria. Lab studies also show the charge keeps surface dust near its source. For
example, loose dust on the floor of a treated room tends not to become
airborne, because as soon as it leaves the floor it is charged and re-attracted
to the floor. Originally, the system was designed to transfer a strong negative
electrostatic charge to dust and microorganisms in an enclosed space and to
collect the charged particles on grounded plates or on surfaces of a room.
BioIon, Inc., an Athens, Ga., company, collaborated with Mitchell and holds the
exclusive license to manufacture and market the technology. The system has reduced Salmonella transmission and other airborne
pathogens by 80 to 95 percent in experimental and commercial hatching cabinets.
Airborne dust in poultry areas has been reduced by 50 to 95 percent. During
continuing research, Mitchell soon found the other beneficial effects of the
system. ARS is the chief scientific research agency in the
U.S. Department of Agriculture. Story contacts Poultry Research Southeast Poultry Research Laboratory Sharon A Durham U.S. Department of Agriculture |