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By ELLEN GOLDBAUM Contributing Editor
A team of UB scientists and engineers has developed a device that in
minutes, instead of months, could safely and inexpensively destroy
airborne biological agents in buildings as large as the Hart Senate
Office Building in Washington, D.C., which was closed for several months
after anthrax was detected there in October 2001.
 |  A scanning electron microscope (SEM)
image (top) shows a sample teeming with viable Bg spores; bottom SEM
image shows dead residue of spores after passing through the BioBlower
at 250 degrees C.
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The device, called the BioBlower, has immediate
homeland-security applications, with the potential to eradicate a wide
range of biological pathogens, such as anthrax, smallpox, SARS,
influenza, tuberculosis and other toxic airborne species. It
destroys pathogens by rapidly heating contaminated air and could be
employed either as a portable air-purification unit for first responders
at the site of a biological attack or installed as a permanent part of a
building's air-handling system to be activated immediately as soon as
biological toxins are detected. UB has filed for a provisional
patent on the Bioblower and is negotiating a licensing arrangement
with B3, a Buffalo company that its developers have formed to
commercialize it. In addition to homeland-security applications,
the BioBlower also could provide a continuous clean air supply in
hospitals, as well as military command centers and other battlefield
facilities. "The BioBlower destroys airborne biological
agents essentially by sterilizing the air," said Jim Garvey, professor
in the Department of Chemistry in the College of Arts and Sciences
and a co-inventor of BioBlower. The other co-inventors are John
Lordi, research professor, James D. Felske, professor, and Joseph C.
Mollendorf, professor, all in the Department of Mechanical and
Aerospace Engineering in the School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences. Garvey noted that the invention represents a quantum
leap ahead of the current conventional technology, HEPA (High-Efficiency
Particulate Air) paper filters, which are used to trap large airborne
spores and need to be changed frequently, stored carefully and
subsequently destroyed. "With our device, there are no filters
to change and very minimal maintenance," said Garvey. "The
BioBlower indiscriminately destroys all airborne biotoxins via the
extreme heating of the gas." In a series of recent tests
performed by scientists in the Department of Microbiology and
Immunology and the Calspan-UB Research Center (CUBRC), the
BioBlower successfully destroyed more than 99.9 percent of
aerosolized spores of a benign anthrax simulant, Bacillus globicii
(Bg). "Bg spores are considered the gold standard for
biotesting," explained Garvey. "Now that we can completely eliminate
these hardy bacteria, we can kill any and all airborne biological
toxins." To conduct the tests, Richard Karalus, director of
microbiology for CUBRC and senior scientist in the Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, and his colleagues devised techniques to
inject an aerosol of the Bg spores into the BioBlower and
recapture them on the exhaust side to see if they were still alive.
At temperatures of 50, 100 and 150 degrees Centigrade, most of the
spores came through unscathed, Garvey said. "But above 200
degrees, in just milliseconds of exposure to that heat, we killed 99.9
percent of them in a single pass," he said. The BioBlower
heats the contaminated air, Garvey explained, by mechanically
compressing it as it is being blown rapidly through a mechanical rotary
pump. "This recompressive process uniformly increases the
temperature of the entire volume of gas, almost instantaneously," he
said, adding that the same type of compressive heating occurs when a
tire gets hot as it is inflated with air. "The dramatic effect
we observed is due to chemical combustion; these spores simply get
burned away to ash," he said. The BioBlower is well-suited
to applications in hospitals and other health-care settings, where
airborne infections can be a leading cause of disease and even death.
"This technology continuously cycles the air," said Garvey,
"making it ideal for use in isolation wards because it will kill
infectious agents in the air before they can be released outside of the
isolated area." The device also is applicable to battlefield
operations, such as tents, command headquarters and enclosed armored
vehicles, where a continuous supply of clean air is essential, he added.
According to its developers, the BioBlower is based on a
modification of a Roots blower, a mechanical air-pump technology that
has been in existence for more than 100 years and has been used for a
range of applicationsfrom vacuum pumps in research laboratories to
superchargers for drag-racing "funny cars." "It's a deceptively
simple idea," said Lordi. Roots blowers, he explained, consist of
two rotating, stainless-steel cams that turn in opposite directions so
that air is sucked in at one end and pushed out at the other end.
Lordi had been conducting research with Mollendorf and Felske on
using a Roots-type mechanism to compressively heat gases. The
BioBlower is a modified Roots blower pump capable of extremely
high gas-flow ratesup to hundreds of cubic feet per minute, Lordi
explained. "In the BioBlower, the entire volume of air
ingested by the rotary pump is rapidly compressed and heated to between
200 and 250 degrees Centigrade," he said. "Then, it's expanded and
cooled before being returnedfree of any biotoxinsto the area
being remediated." The UB team is seeking government and private
funding to further test the BioBlower on viruses and other bacteria and
also to modify it for destruction of chemical agents as well.
Biotesting with Bg was funded by UB's Center for Advanced
Technology, which promotes development and commercialization of UB
research with the support of the New York State Office of Science,
Technology and Academic Research (NYSTAR). The BioBlower is
a direct result of collaborations between chemists in the College of
Arts and Sciences, engineers in the School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences, and microbiologists in the School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences.
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