Chemical warfare agents (CWA) can be absorbed by variety of materials including polymeric coatings like paints through bulk liquid contact, thus presenting touch and vapor hazards to interacting personnel. In order for accurate hazard assessments and subsequent decontamination approaches to be designed, it is necessary to characterize the absorption and distribution of highly toxic species, as well as their chemical simulant analogs, in the subsurface of engineered, heterogeneous materials. Using a combination of judicious sample preparation in concert with scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), it should be possible to directly measure the uptake and distribution of CWA simulants in the subsurface of complex multilayer coatings. Polyurethane and alkyd coatings were applied to aluminum and silicon substrates and contaminated with 2-chloroethyl ethyl sulfide (CEES) and dimethyl methylphosphonate (DMMP). The surfaces and cross-sectional interfaces of the contaminated coatings were probed with SEM-EDS to provide imaging, spectral, and elemental mapping data of the contaminant-material systems. This work demonstrated SEM-EDS capability to detect and spatially resolve unique elemental signatures of CWA simulants within military coatings. The visual and quantitative results provided by these direct measurements illustrate contaminant spatial distributions, provide order-of-magnitude approximations for diffusion coefficients, and reveal material characteristics that may impact contaminant transport into complex coating materials. It was found that contaminant uptake was significantly different between the topcoat and primer layers.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/am504487j | DOI Listing |
Rev Sci Instrum
December 2024
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218, USA.
The development of systems to measure and optimize emerging energetic material performance is critical for Chemical Warfare Agent (CWA) defeat. In order to assess composite metal powder efficacy on CWA simulant defeat, this study documents a combination of two spectroscopic systems designed to monitor the decomposition of a CWA simulant and temperature rises due to combusting metal powders simultaneously. The first system is a custom benchtop Polygonal Rotating Mirror Infrared Spectrometer (PRiMIRS) incorporating a fully customizable sample cell to observe the decomposition of Diisopropyl Methyl Phosphonate (DIMP) as it interacts with combusting composite metal particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chromatogr A
January 2025
Institute of Nutritional and Food Sciences, University of Bonn, Friedrich-Hirzebruch Allee 5, D-53115 Bonn, Germany; HyperChrom Deutschland GmbH, Konrad-Zuse-Strasse 3, 53347 Alfter, Germany. Electronic address:
A thermal desorption FF-TG-GC/MS method with a cycle time of just 164s including cryofocusing, thermal desorption, analyte separation and system cool down was developed for the analysis of ten explosives and six chemical warfare agent (CWA) simulants. Sampling was carried out both in liquid and gaseous form using micro thermal desorption tubes (μTD-tubes, 1.4mm I.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Adv
October 2024
Centre for Nanotechnology & Advanced Biomaterials (CeNTAB), SASTRA Deemed University Thanjavur Tamil Nadu - 613 401 India +91 4362 264 120 +91 4362 350 009. ext. 2255.
Exigency in search of an ideal candidate for an effective detoxification of chemical warfare agents is still continuing. Zirconium-based Metal-organic Framework (MOF) UiO-66 has shown a significant detoxification of such toxic chemicals owing to its tunable physio-chemical properties and profuse catalytic sites. In this context, a series of UiO-66 MOFs synthesized by tuning the acidity constant (p ) and concentration of the modulator, synthesis temperature and water molecules was tested for their detoxification efficiency against the simulant 'methyl-paraoxon' at room temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBeilstein J Nanotechnol
August 2024
Advanced Centre for Research in High Energy Materials (ACRHEM), DRDO Industry Academia - Centre of Excellence (DIA-COE), University of Hyderabad, Prof. C. R. Rao Road, Hyderabad 500046, Telangana, India.
The present study investigates the effects of input wavelength (1064, 532, and 355 nm) and surrounding liquid environment (distilled water and aqueous NaCl solution) on the picosecond laser ablation on silver (Ag), gold (Au), and Ag/Au alloy targets. The efficacy of the laser ablation technique was meticulously evaluated by analyzing the ablation rates, surface plasmon resonance peak positions, and particle size distributions of the obtained colloids. The nanoparticles (NPs) were characterized using the techniques of UV-visible absorption, transmission electron microscopy, and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
July 2024
Faculty of Advanced Technologies and Chemistry, Military University of Technology, 00-908 Warsaw, Poland.
In the present study, we used two popular radio communication SAW resonators as a base for gas sensors and tested their performance. Taking into account issues related to sensor sensitivity, the possibility of applying a sensor layer, the availability of devices, and other related issues, we selected two popular single-port resonators with center frequencies of 315 and 433 MHz (models R315 and R433, respectively) for testing purposes. Both resonators were equipped with a sensitive film of hexafluoroisopropanol-substituted polydimethylsiloxane, a material that selectively absorbs molecules with a high ability to form basic hydrogen bonds.
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