Detection of biological threats in room air is a challenging problem due to their low concentration and the relatively high
concentration of background. Dynamic sorting of threat particles from background clutter and dust prior to collection
for analysis can provide substantially enriched samples with the advantages of greater analytical accuracy in shorter
periods of time. The conceptually simple process of capturing threat particles and rejecting background in fact requires
sophisticated particle detection and classification, timing, capture and final threat identification subsystems operating in
concert. The effectiveness of the process is also strongly influenced by the operational conditions including threat and
background loads as well as the time allotted for sample collection. The requirements of the final threat identification
system will dictate the form factor for the collected sample and if collection is to be done dry or into a liquid.
A number of sorting systems are currently under development to achieve enrichment for subsequent analysis.
Enrichment factors, a common figure of merit for these systems, will be shown to be an inadequate indicator for
comparing these systems unless standard operating conditions are used and other parameters are well defined. A set of
parameters will be suggested that better allows characterization of the collection component of the sorting system.
Sarnoff Corporation and the Naval Research Laboratory, through support of the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security, are developing an automated, high throughput bio-aerosol physical enrichment system designed for use as
part of a biological-threat protection system. The Biological Aerosol-Capture-Enrichment (BioACE) system is a
bio-aerosol collection system that combines three unique technologies to create physically enriched aerosol samples
that can be subsequently interrogated by any number of bio-threat detection systems for the presence of threat
agents. An air-to-air concentrator uses an inertial separation technique to highly concentrate an aerosol sample
presented to a dual wavelength ultra-violet laser induced fluorescence (UVLIF) optical trigger used to discriminate
potential threat particles from non-threat particles conveyed in a collimated particle stream. This particle
classification information is used to trigger an electrostatic deposition mechanism to deposit only those particles
determined to be potential bio-threats onto a stainless steel substrate. Non-threat particles are discarded with the
exiting airflow.
The goal for the most recent development effort has been the integration and optimization of these technologies into
a unit capable of producing highly enriched particulate samples from ambient air containing variable background
aerosol loading and type. Several key technical and engineering challenges were overcome during the course of this
development including a unique solution for compensating particle velocity dispersion within the airflow,
development of a real-time signal acquisition and detection algorithm for determining material type on a particle by
particle basis at rates greater than 2000 particles per second, and the introduction of a robust method for transferring
deposited particulate into a 50ul wet sample suitable for most advanced bio-detection techniques.
This paper will briefly describe the overall system architecture and then concentrate on the various component and
system design tradeoffs required to optimize sample enrichment performance. A system performance model will be
presented along with detailed analysis of the optical system components and electronic signal processing needed for
achieving high concentration sample enrichment. Experimental methods and data obtained in the laboratory setting
and from real world environments will be described and used to support the performance model of the system.
Finally, a number of air sampling scenarios will be analyzed using the system performance model to determine the
applicability of the BioACE system to the various concepts of operation perceived to be needed for achieving a high
performance bio-threat detect-to-protect system.
Sarnoff Corporation and the Naval Research Laboratory, through support from HSARPA, are developing an automated,
high throughput bio-aerosol physical enrichment system designed for use as part of a biological-threat protection system.
The Biological Aerosol-Capture-Enrichment (BioACE) system is a bio-aerosol collection system that combines three
unique technologies to create physically enriched aerosol samples that can be subsequently interrogated by any number
of bio-threat detection systems for the presence of threat agents. An air-to-air concentrator uses an inertial separation
technique to highly concentrate an aerosol sample presented to a dual wavelength ultra-violet laser induced fluorescence
(UVLIF) optical trigger used to discriminate potential threat particles from non-threat particles conveyed in a collimated
particle stream. This particle classification information is used to trigger an electrostatic deposition mechanism to
deposit only those particles determined to be potential bio-threats onto a stainless steel substrate. Non-threat particles are
discarded with the exiting airflow. A prototype laboratory system in which particle size dependent elastic scatter rater
than fluorescence provides the triggering signal has been experimentally qualified. This paper will present a detailed
overview of the prototype system and discuss the physical enrichment results achieved.
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