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New
Decontamination System Kills Anthrax Rapidly
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Combination
X-ray and ultraviolet-c system leaves no lingering effects
GTRI
research scientists Brent Wagner and Hisham Menkara
optimized a UV-C phosphor for use in a flat panel system
with X-rays that can kill anthrax spores in two to three
hours without any lingering effects
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Credit:
Georgia Institute of Technology / Gary Meek
In October 2001,
letters containing anthrax spores were mailed to several news
media offices and two U.S. senators, killing five people and
infecting 17 others. Clearing the Senate office building of
the spores with chlorine dioxide gas cost $27 million, according
to the Government Accountability Office. Cleaning the Brentwood
postal facility outside Washington cost $130 million and took 26
months.
Researchers at the Georgia Tech
Research Institute (GTRI) in collaboration with Austin-based
Stellar Micro Devices, Inc. (SMD) have developed prototypes of a
rapid, non-disruptive and less expensive method that could be
used to decontaminate bioterrorism hazards in the future.
Using
flat panel modules that produce X-rays and ultraviolet-C (UV-C)
light simultaneously, the researchers can kill anthrax spores in
two to three hours without any lingering effects. The system also
has the ability to kill anthrax spores hidden in places like
computer keyboards without causing damage.
“This is
certainly an improvement over previous techniques,” said
Brent Wagner, GTRI principal research scientist and director of
its Phosphor Technology Center of Excellence (PTCOE). “The
UV-C attacks spores on surfaces and the X-rays penetrate through
materials and kill spores in cracks and crevices.”
X-ray
irradiation is used commercially to sterilize medical products
and food by disrupting the ability of a microorganism to
reproduce. UV-C also prevents replication, but both types of
radiation can penetrate the outer structure of an anthrax spore
to destroy the bacteria inside.
The current
decontamination standard – chlorine dioxide gas –
kills microorganisms by disrupting transport of nutrients across
the cell wall, but cannot reach hidden spores. Hard surfaces must
be cleaned independently with harsh liquid chlorine dioxide. In
addition, people cannot re-enter a room fumigated with chlorine
dioxide until the gas is neutralized with sodium bisulfite vapor
and vented from the building.
The new decontamination
system resembles a coat rack with radiation modules arranged on
rings at various heights that face outward to broadcast radiation
throughout a room. Since the X-rays and UV-C are lethal at the
flux densities used, the system operates unattended and is turned
on outside the affected space.
UV-C light in the modules
is produced using the optical and electrical phenomenon of
cathodoluminescence. Numerous electron beams are generated by
arrays of cold cathodes, each acting like the electron gun in a
cathode ray tube.
“When an electron beam hits a
powder phosphor, it luminesces and emits visible and/or
non-visible light,” explained Hisham Menkara, a GTRI senior
research scientist.
GTRI became involved in SMD’s
project, which was funded by the Air Force Research Laboratory’s
Small Business Innovation Research program, because the PTCOE
housed UV-C phosphors created and patented by Sarnoff Corporation
in the mid-1970s.
“We knew that Georgia
Tech had experts in powder phosphors with regard to flat panel
displays and we approached them to develop new phosphors for our
decontamination purpose,” said Mark Eaton, president and
CEO of SMD. “We were fortunate that they had UV-C phosphors
available from decades earlier.”
With the Sarnoff
phosphors in hand, Wagner and Menkara set off to determine the
best UV-C emitting phosphor and optimize its properties for use
with X-rays in SMD’s small flat panel display.
To
find the best phosphor that emitted light in the UV-C region of
the spectrum – wavelengths below 280 nanometers –
the emission spectra of each phosphor was measured against the
DNA absorption curve. This curve shows the optimal wavelengths to
destroy an organism’s DNA.
After investigating many
different phosphors, the researchers chose lanthanum
phosphate:praseodymium (LaPO4:Pr or LAP:Pr) as the most efficient
phosphor, with a power efficiency near 10 percent. Since the
UV emission didn’t fall completely under the DNA absorption
curve, the relative “killing efficiency” was
approximately 50 percent.
In the laboratory, Menkara
created the phosphor by mixing precursors lanthanum oxide,
hydrogen phosphate and praseodymium fluoride (La2O3, H3PO4 and
PrF3, respectively) in a glass beaker with methanol (CH3OH) and
ammonium chloride (NH4Cl). Air drying the mixture in a fume hood
caused the methanol to completely evaporate.
The
resultant cake was crushed into a fine powder, heated in a
furnace to a temperature as high as 1250 degrees Celsius for
two hours and crushed again.
“To determine the best
conditions for producing the highest efficiency phosphor, we
tried different precursors and completed the firing under
different atmospheric conditions and temperatures,”
explained Menkara.
Test results showed that higher
temperatures were more efficient and a capped quartz tube was the
best container to hold the powder inside the furnace. Wagner and
Menkara also found that adding lithium fluoride (LiF) and
reducing the praseodymium concentration increased the
cathodoluminescent properties of the LAP:Pr phosphor.
With
the improved phosphor, laboratory tests conducted by SMD showed
that the combined X-ray and UV-C decontamination system could
kill anthrax spores.
GTRI researchers hope to develop new
UV-C phosphors that can achieve cathodoluminescent efficiency
higher than 10 percent with an emission spectrum that
provides increased coverage of the DNA absorption curve.
With
increased efficiency, UV-C panels could be used for sterilizing
medical equipment or purification applications.
“We
may be able to use UV-C panels to clean wastewater, which would
be better than the lamps currently used. In the environment where
the lamps must operate, they are very difficult to clean, whereas
flat panels could be cleaned with a squeegee,” noted Eaton.
Another potential application is to kill viruses in
buildings used to house chickens. Current methods involve
removing the chickens and raising the temperature in the chicken
houses for several days to deactivate the virus.
“With
the combined UV-C/X-ray system, you could turn the system on for
a few hours, kill the viruses and as soon as you turn it off, the
chickens could come right back in,” said Wagner.
Source:
Georgia Institute of Technology

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