A methodology to i) assess the feasibility of water disinfection in fresh-cut leafy greens wash water and ii) to
compare the disinfectant efficiency of water disinfectants was defined and applied for a combination of peracetic
acid (PAA) and lactic acid (LA) and comparison with free chlorine was made. Standardized process water, a watery
suspension of iceberg lettuce, was used for the experiments. First, the combination of PAA + LA was evaluated
for water recycling. In this case disinfectant was added to standardized process water inoculated with
Escherichia coli (E. coli) O157 (6 log CFU/mL). Regression models were constructed based on the batch inactivation
data and validated in industrial process water obtained from fresh-cut leafy green processing plants. The
UV254(F) was the best indicator for PAA decay and as such for the E. coli O157 inactivation with PAA + LA. The
disinfection efficiency of PAA + LA increased with decreasing pH. Furthermore, PAA + LA efficacy was assessed
as a process water disinfectant to be used within the washing tank, using a dynamic washing process with continuous
influx of E. coli O157 and organic matter in the washing tank. The process water contamination in the dynamic
process was adequately estimated by the developed model that assumed that knowledge of the
disinfectant residual was sufficient to estimate the microbial contamination, regardless the physicochemical
load. Based on the obtained results, PAA + LA seems to be better suited than chlorine for disinfecting process
wash water with a high organic load but a higher disinfectant residual is necessary due to the slower E. coli
O157 inactivation kinetics when compared to chlorine.Ciencias de la Alimentació