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Home » Chem-Bio » Biosniffers

Biosniffers

biodetector.jpg
The Air Force Research Laboratory thinks they have a new biode­tec­tor in the form of a hand-​​held sen­sor that would col­lect and iso­late sam­ples, detect and iden­tify agents, and tell the oper­a­tor how seri­ous of a threat exists. This sen­sor, devel­oped by DOE’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in coop­er­a­tion with the Air Force, oper­ates very sim­i­larly to the M1 Chemical Agent Monitor (CAM), in that it is intended to man­u­ally detect the rel­a­tive level of con­t­a­m­i­na­tion after an attack or fol­low­ing decon­t­a­m­i­na­tion of a per­son or piece of equipment.

With the pro­to­type sys­tem, the user sprays the sus­pected con­t­a­m­i­nated area, cre­at­ing a sam­ple that can be picked up by a swab. The sam­ple mate­r­ial on the swab is sus­pended in liq­uid by rins­ing it in a con­tainer. Once in a liq­uid form, the sam­ple is injected into a spe­cial flow cell, the place where the assay occurs.
The flow cell is cur­rently designed for one-​​time use. Since the cell is sealed, it can be decon­t­a­m­i­nated by immer­sion in a bleach solu­tion and then safely trans­ported to a foren­sic lab­o­ra­tory for fur­ther analy­sis where it can be opened to retrieve the sam­ple mate­r­ial.
A liq­uid crys­tal dis­play, or LCD, pro­vides a quan­ti­ta­tive read­out of the con­cen­tra­tion of tar­geted mate­r­ial present, and a set of red, yel­low, and green light emit­ting diodes pro­vides an eas­ily inter­preted read­ing of the threat level. For instance, “no threat” is green, a barely detectable to medium level of an agent is one or two yel­low dots, and a high detec­tion level is red.

Sounds great! When can we buy a dozen? Well there are a few hur­dles to be passed yet. Traditionally, the National Labs have worked in the basic research area, which means while they have a proof of prin­ci­ple here, the device will require sev­eral months, per­haps years, until it gets to the point that it is a ruggedi­zed and fully tested and accepted mil­i­tary item. In the usual course of events, this item would tran­si­tion to the DOD Chemical-​​Biological Defense Program and con­tinue its mat­u­ra­tion.
The usual chal­lenges in biode­tec­tion focus on the reli­a­bil­ity and time­li­ness of detec­tion, espe­cially at low lev­els of bio­log­i­cal war­fare agents. Traditional air sam­plers take 15–30 min­utes to detect and iden­tify large sam­ples of agent. Smaller poly­merase chain reac­tion diag­no­sis sys­tems (which appears to be the basis for this sen­sor) can take up to an hour, and usu­ally require very clean sam­ples (free from envi­ron­men­tal inter­fer­rents). Since many bio­log­i­cal war­fare agents can cause ill­nesses with such small con­cen­tra­tions and the pos­si­bil­ity of con­ta­gion is high (par­tic­u­larly with viruses), there’s always been a very real chal­lenge in achiev­ing high reli­a­bil­ity and high sen­si­tiv­ity in small, hand-​​held detec­tors. So don’t send in your orders quite yet.
– Armchair Generalist

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June 21st, 2005 | Chem-Bio | 3626 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2005/06/21/biosniffers/Biosniffers2005-06-21+13%3A13%3A13 You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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