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A laboratory exposure system to study the effects of aging on super-micron aerosol particles
Author(s) -
Joshua L. Santarpia,
Andres Sanchez,
Gabriel Lucero,
Brandon Lee Servantes,
Joshua A. Hubbard
Publication year - 2014
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1204086
Subject(s) - aerosol , tracer , particle (ecology) , oxidizing agent , radiation , range (aeronautics) , environmental science , relative humidity , environmental chemistry , sunlight , biological system , materials science , chemistry , meteorology , physics , optics , nuclear physics , ecology , composite material , organic chemistry , biology
A laboratory system was constructed that allows the super-micron particles to be aged for long periods of time under conditions that can simulate a range of natural environments and conditions, including relative humidity, oxidizing chemicals, organics and simulated solar radiation. Two proof-of-concept experiments using a non-biological simulant for biological particles and a biological simulant demonstrate the utility of these types of aging experiments. Green Visolite®, which is often used as a tracer material for model validation experiments, does not degrade with exposure to simulated solar radiation, the actual biological material does. This would indicate that Visolite® should be a good tracer compound for mapping the extent of a biological release using fluorescence as an indicator, but that it should not be used to simulate the decay of a biological particle when exposed to sunlight. The decay in the fluorescence measured for B. thurengiensis is similar to what has been previously observed in outdoor environments.

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