Nonequilibrium plasmas, generated at atmospheric pressure through electric discharge, are in wide commercial use, especially for cleaning surfaces and improving surface adhesion. By producing a range of reactive chemical species, both charged and neutral, they can also inactivate or kill bacteria and other pathogens. When bacteria colonize the surface of fresh fruits and leafy vegetables, they encase themselves in a protective layer known as a biofilm. Plasmas’ ability to breach biofilms has caught the attention of the food industry. Yet for plasmas to be deployed as food decontamination tools, their ability to do the job must be understood, controllable, and reproducible. In one step toward that goal, Dawei (David) Liu, Xinpei Lu, and colleagues at China’s Huazhong University of Science and Technology and at Shanghai Jiao Tong University have now used a two-dimensional discharge model to analyze the interactions between the plasma and a biofilm on the surface of an...

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