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Sandia
Decon Formulation, Best Known As An Anthrax Killer, Takes On
Household Mold
04/27/07
Product available in
hardware stores as Scott’s Liquid Gold Mold Control 500
In
this 1999 photo, Sandia researcher Mark Tucker examines two
petri dishes: one with a simulant of anthrax growing in it
(left), the other treated with the decontaminating
formulation developed at Sandia Photo by Randy
Montoya
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A product based on a
technology originally developed at Sandia National Laboratories
is now available on the shelves of hardware stores across the
country.
The product is Mold Control
500, distributed by Scott’s Liquid Gold of Denver and now
available in Home Depot, Wal-Mart, True Value, Ace Hardware, and
other home improvement stores. For around $30 a box, Scott’s
Liquid Gold Mold Control 500 treats mildew- and mold-contaminated
surface areas in the home, according to the package.
MC 500 is based on Sandia’s
decontamination formulation (a.k.a. decon foam), developed for
emergency cleanup of biological and chemical warfare agents
following a terrorist attack. It is best known for its role in
helping remediate anthrax-contaminated buildings in Washington,
D.C., and New York in 2001.
Sandia is a National Nuclear
Security Administration laboratory.
“This is pretty
exciting,” says Sandia researcher Mark Tucker, who leads
the Sandia team that has developed, improved, and tested the
Sandia formulation over the last 10 years. “Mold
remediation wasn’t what we set out to do, but the
formulation is effective at killing most microorganisms, so it is
good to find uses beyond our original intent — especially
uses that may improve public health.”
The formulation kills fungi
such as molds in much the same way it kills anthrax, says Tucker.
Mold growths form films over their surfaces that, like the shells
of anthrax spores, are difficult to penetrate. The formulation’s
surfactants poke holes in the film, and its mild oxidizing
components kill the fungal organisms. The formulation, when used
as a foam, expands to fill space and thus gets into corners and
other hard-to-reach places, and it sticks to walls and ceilings,
giving the chemistry time to do its work.
Scott’s Liquid Gold has
an arrangement with Modec, Inc., of Denver to sell Mold Control
500 in retail markets. Modec is one of two companies holding
Sandia licenses to market and distribute products based on the
Sandia formulation.
“Mold control is an up
and coming issue,” says Modec President Brian Kalamanka.
“We felt there was an excellent niche for this.”
Jeff Hinkle, Scott’s
Liquid Gold senior vice president for marketing, says its recent
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency approval allowed shipping to
retail outlets to begin in the fall. Stores began stocking MC 500
in November, and the product is expected to reach thousands more
stores this month, he says.
Development of the Sandia
formulation began in 1997, funded initially by the U.S.
Department of Energy’s Chemical and Biological National
Security Program. It has earned two patents, and several more are
pending.
In addition to helping clean up
contaminated buildings following a series of mailings of anthrax
powder to recipients in Washington, D.C., New York, and Florida
in 2001, the Sandia foam also was staged in the Middle East in
2003 as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom and has played a role
there in helping clean up hazardous chemical sites. Sandia’s
two licensees, Modec Inc. and Intelagard Inc., have sold
thousands of gallons of the formulation to municipal and state
governments, the first responder community, and the U.S.
military, among other users.
Tests at Sandia and Kansas
State University in 2004 demonstrated the formulation’s
effectiveness for killing the virus that causes severe acute
respiratory syndrome (SARS), suggesting its use also might blunt
the spread of other viruses such as the Norwalk (cruise ship)
virus, avian influenza (bird flu), and the common flu.
The formulation now is being
discussed as a potential solution to at least a dozen problems,
among them hospital sanitization, meth lab cleanup, mold
remediation in commercial buildings, and cleaning out
agricultural pesticide sprayers in an environmentally benign way.
Source:
Sandia National laboratories

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