How do you use Biofilms in a sentence? See 10+ example sentences showing how this word appears in different contexts, plus the exact meaning.
Biofilms meaning
plural of biofilm
Using Biofilms
- The main meaning on this page is: plural of biofilm
- In the example corpus, biofilms often appears in combinations such as: biofilms are, of biofilms, biofilms in.
Context around Biofilms
- Average sentence length in these examples: 21.9 words
- Position in the sentence: 9 start, 7 middle, 4 end
- Sentence types: 20 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Biofilms
- In this selection, "biofilms" usually appears near the start of the sentence. The average example has 21.9 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, conditions, new, smith, inhabiting, bacterial and form stand out and add context to how "biofilms" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include bacteria producing biofilms are a and biofilms are slimy. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "biofilms" sits close to words such as abadi, abdelaziz and absolutist, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with biofilms
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
Dispersal enables biofilms to spread and colonize new surfaces. (9 words)
Sometimes biofilms form in the drains or pipes leading from sinks in hospitals. (13 words)
Biofilms on floors and counters can make sanitation difficult in food preparation areas. (13 words)
Unlike previous studies carried out in that focus on the genetic potential of biofilms inhabiting plastics, this research led by Dr. Sabine Matallana-Surget took a unique approach by analyzing the proteins expressed by active microorganisms. (36 words)
Bacteria-producing biofilms are a serious threat to public health around the world, but due to poor health conditions and low chances of infections in economic resources it is high in developing countries. (33 words)
According to the study's lead researcher, Dr. John Smith, “Biofilms are a formidable barrier in food safety due to their resilience against traditional cleaning measures and their role in harboring pathogens. (32 words)
Example sentences (20)
Some biofilms have been found to contain water channels that help distribute nutrients and signalling molecules. citation This matrix is strong enough that under certain conditions, biofilms can become fossilized ( Stromatolites ).
A widely used application for environmental water is to raise water levels in rivers and weirs to inundate new hard surfaces to grow new biofilms.
Biofilms are slimy layers of bacteria that ooze a protective jelly that makes antibiotic treatment difficult and DNA sharing between microbes easy.
According to the study's lead researcher, Dr. John Smith, “Biofilms are a formidable barrier in food safety due to their resilience against traditional cleaning measures and their role in harboring pathogens.
Dartmouth researchers explored how bacteria species coexist in communities known as biofilms, which can cause serious infections and are notoriously difficult to treat.
Unlike previous studies carried out in that focus on the genetic potential of biofilms inhabiting plastics, this research led by Dr. Sabine Matallana-Surget took a unique approach by analyzing the proteins expressed by active microorganisms.
It hinders the spread of biofilms, bacterial colonies that join together to form a tough material that makes killing the bacteria difficult.
This patented, light-activated antimicrobial kills drug-resistant bacteria, viruses, and fungi, including those in biofilms, in minutes.
Bacteria-producing biofilms are a serious threat to public health around the world, but due to poor health conditions and low chances of infections in economic resources it is high in developing countries.
Sometimes biofilms form in the drains or pipes leading from sinks in hospitals.
Then there are the possibilities of a disease of biofilms like Legionnaires’ disease invading the lungs of animals and them having no resistance to it.
This behavior, while interesting in itself, might have implications for rotating equipment in environments where biofilms easily form.
Although many techniques have developed to identify planktonic bacteria in viable wounds, few have been able to quickly and accurately identify bacterial biofilms.
As such, the ability to form biofilms alone may be linked to the increased virulence in some of the strains.
Biofilms have been connected to about 80% of bacterial infections in the United States.
Biofilms on floors and counters can make sanitation difficult in food preparation areas.
Biofilms will form on virtually every non-shedding surface in a non-sterile aqueous (or very humid) environment.
Dispersal enables biofilms to spread and colonize new surfaces.
During the washing process, biofilms resist sanitization and allow bacteria to spread across the produce.
For example, many sewage treatment plants include a secondary treatment stage in which waste water passes over biofilms grown on filters, which extract and digest organic compounds.
Common combinations with biofilms
These word pairs occur most frequently in English texts:
- biofilms are 5×
- of biofilms 4×
- biofilms in 3×
- form biofilms 3×
- biofilms have 2×
- biofilms can 2×
- as biofilms 2×
- in biofilms 2×