Title: DEFENDING BUILDINGS AGAINST BIOTERRORISM
1DEFENDING BUILDINGS AGAINST BIOTERRORISM
Filtration Solutions
- Wladyslaw Jan Kowalski, PE, PhD
- The Pennsylvania State University
- Department of Architectural Engineering
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3Filtration Systems for Immune BuildingsOutline
- A Brief History of CBW Warfare
- Chemical Biological Weapons (CBW)
- Epidemiology of CBW Agents
- CBW Delivery Systems
- Buildings Ventilation Systems
- CBW Attack Scenarios
- Air Disinfection Air Cleaning Systems
- Simulation Results
- CBW Detection Systems
- Remediation
4A BRIEF HISTORY OF CBW WARFARE
5A BRIEF HISTORY OF CBW WARFARE
6Chemical Weapon Agents
7Biological Weapon Agents
8Pathogenic Microbes
9Database of BW Pathogens
10BW Agent Pathology
11Chemical Weapon Agents
12Toxins
- Poisons produced by organisms
- Bioregulators control physiology
- Operate with different mechanisms
- Some can be grown in culture
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14MSDS for CBW Agents
15MSDS for BW Agents
16Most Dangerous Toxins
17Lethal Dose vs. Infectious Dose
For chemicals Lethal Dose vs. Incapacitating Dose
18Lethal Dose Curves BW Agents
19Lethal Dose Curves CW Agents
20CBW Delivery Systems
- Outdoor Dispersion
- Explosives
- Crop Dusters
- Sprayers / Aerosolizers
- Indoor Dispersion
- Explosives
- Sprayers / Aerosolizers
- Passive Release / Spills
21Indoor Dispersion
22Indoor Dispersion Mechanisms
23Released BW Agents are Invisible
Some Chemical Agents are Visible
24Aerosolizer
Can be used to aerosolize liquids or powders
Can be driven by a compressor, compressed air
tank, building air, AHU suction pressure
25Aerosol Generators
26Low Tech Aerosol Generators
Spray Guns
27Low Tech High Volume Spray Guns
Might be used with Chemicals
28High Tech Aerosol Generators
- Might be used with Biological Agents
29Aerosolization in Duct
30Ventilation Systems
- Natural Ventilation
- Constant Volume
- VAV Systems
- 100 Outside Air
- Other Systems
- Rooftop Locations for most tall buildings
31Placement Points in a Building Ventilation System
32Types of Buildings Relative Risk
33Commercial Buildings
34Government Buildings
35Food Entertainment
36Health Care Facilities
37Lodging Hotels
38Educational Facilities
39Mercantile Facilities
40Auditoriums Stadiums
May be vulnerable to a general area release
41Multizoned Buildings
42Immune Building Technologies
- Air Cleaning
- Dilution Ventilation
- Filtration
- Ultraviolet Germicidal Irradiation (UVGI)
- Charcoal Adsorption
- Detection Biosensors
- Isolation
- Security Measures
43Primary Air Cleaning Technologies
44Ventilation Systems
45Dilution Ventilation
- Most Buildings Recirculate Air
- 15-15 Outside Air is drawn in
- Variable Air Volume Systems adjust amount of
outside air - 100 Outside Air Systems
- Purge continuously
- Common in Health Care
46Filtration
- Filters come in various efficiencies
- Dust filters are common but have little effect on
micron-size particles - Nominal Filters 25 - 95
- HEPA Filters 99.97
47Filtration of BW Agents MERV 7
48Filtration of BW Agents MERV 9
49Filtration of BW Agents MERV 11
50Filtration of BW Agents MERV 13
51Filtration of BW Agents MERV 14
52Filtration of BW Agents MERV 17
53Penetration of HEPA Filters byBW Agents
54Ultraviolet Germicidal Irradiation
- UVGI can be effective when properly designed
- Destroys Viruses
- Destroys Most Bacteria
- Can Destroy Spores at High Power
55UVGI Effect on Pathogens
56Combined Filtration UVGI
57Lumalier UV Design Project
- High power UVGI system
- 25 filters
- Destroys 84 of anthrax spores
- Destroys 99 of smallpox virus
- Destroys 99 of TB bacilli
58Sizing UVGI with Filtration
- Determine each microbes removal from filter
performance curves (call this kill rate) - Determine each microbes kill rate after UVGI
exposure ( kill rate 1 - survival )
59Possible CBW Attack Scenarios
- Scenario A Gradual release in AHU
- Scenario B Gradual Release in General Area
- Scenario C Sudden Release in Outside Air Intakes
- Scenario D Sudden Release in General Area
- Scenario E Outside Air Release
60Scenario A Gradual Release in AHU
- Contaminates all areas evenly
- Maximizes casualties in office buildings
- Surreptitious release
- Requires aerosol device
61Scenario B Gradual Release in General Area
- Highly contaminates local area
- Lower levels of contamination in other areas
- Less severe then Scenario A
- Requires release device
62Scenario C Sudden Release in OA Intakes
- Contaminates all areas evenly
- Requires no release device
- Requires OA intake access
- Less Severe than Scenario A
- Severity highly dependent on the presence of
filtration
63Scenario D Sudden Release in General Area
- Highly contaminates local area
- Less contamination in other areas
- Less severe than other scenarios
- May require sudden release device
- or May be spilled or dumped
- May alert occupants
64Scenario E Outside Air Release
- Inefficient, requires large quantities to achieve
high inlet concentrations - Will impact multiple buildings
- Less severe for individual building than other
scenarios - Requires dispersion equipment
- The Classic Military Scenario
65CW Agents Atriums Smoke Vents
66Atriums Reversed Smoke Vents
67Elevator Shafts Stairwells
- Stack effect may increase dispersion
- May increase concentrations in upper or lower
areas - OA temperature can influence flow direction
68Special Case Auditoriums
- Air mixing is primary determinant of contaminant
spread - Unpredictable by simple zone models
69Simulation-Based Filter Selection
- Not dependent on removal rates
- Removal rates are arbitrary
- Removal rate criteria results in over-design
- Design Objective Protect Occupants
- Practical Design Criteria is to Minimize
Casualties - Simulation can be used to estimate fatalities
70Simulation of Attack Scenarios
- Evaluate Design Basis Scenarios
- Worst cases Scenario A, B, C
- Evaluate Design Basis BW Agents
- Anthrax, Smallpox, Botulinum
- Establish Baseline Release Quantity
- 99 Predicted Fatalities
- Evaluate Filter UVGI systems
- Filters (MERV 7-17)
- UVGI (URV 7-17)
71UVGI Rating Value (URV)
- Analogous to MERV
- 20 increments
- Design velocity assumed
- Spans range or typical minimums maximums
- Based on Average UVGI Intensity
- Critical Design Parameter is Average Intensity
- Defines UVGI System in Engineering Terms
- Not a Function of Dose
- Dose does not define system size
72MERV / URV Systems
73Simulation Results Worst Case
74Simulation Results Scenario ASlow Release in
AHU
75Simulation Results Scenario BSlow Release on
Main Floor
76Simulation Results Scenario CSudden Release in
OA Intake
77Simulation Conclusions
- Predicted fatalities provide a basis for sizing
air cleaning components - Only one ideal size exists for air cleaning
components - Critical size is a function of the building
characteristics ventilation system - Critical size is independent of air cleaning
capacity and BW agent
78Detection Biosensors
- Some Biodetection Systems Exist
- Only a few BW agents can be detected
- Requires minimum 10-30 minutes
- Systems are Expensive
- Chemical Detection Systems exist
- Most CW agents can be detected
- Requires Minimum 2-4 minutes
- Systems are Expensive
79Biodetection Alternatives
- Particle Detectors
- Can detect presence of particles in the air
instantly - Expensive
- Air Samplers
- Cultured Plates can be inspected or evaluated by
a Lab - Takes time
- Not too expensive
80Detect-to-Isolate Architecture
- Only chemical agents can be rapidly detected
- Duct must be long enough to allow for response
time - Can be expensive
81Air Sampling for Detection
- Sample continuously
- Send to Lab each Wednesday Friday
- If Cultures Positive then Treat Occupants
82Detect-to-Treat Architecture
For BW Agents only
Example Case Anthrax spores
- Anthrax release in building on day 1
- Air Sampler Results on Day 3-5
83Detection Times Disease Progression Curves
84Personnel Protection
- Protective gear
- Safe Zones
- Emergency Planning
- Training Education
- Immunization
85Physical Security Measures
- Protection of HVAC Equipment
- Lockdown Equipment Rooms
- Bar or lock duct access doors
- Raise outside air intake ducts
- Screen or bar outside air intakes
- Alarms
- Video cameras
- outside air intakes
- Equipment rooms
- Rooftop equipment
- Metal Detectors
86CBW Post-Attack Remediation
- Decontamination of buildings and Equipment
- Chlorine dioxide being used for anthrax
- Destroys some materials, metals, furniture
- Leaves a residue
- Ozone could be used
- Destroys rubber and some organic materials
- Scrubbing with bleach
- Long-term UV exposure
- Long-term sunlight and outside air exposure
87Conclusions
- Various technologies can protect buildings
- Ventilation, Filtration, UVGI, Carbon adsorbers
- Various delivery mechanisms and scenarios are
possible - BW Agent Delivery may be surreptitious
- UVGI Filtration should be combined
- Systems can be sized based on Anthrax spores,
smallpox, botulinum - Simulation may be the best approach for sizing
components - Only one critical size exists for any air
cleaning system
88The End
The End