Office of Research and Development Publications

Physical Removal Options for Porous/Permeable Materials Contaminated with a Persistent Chemical Warfare Agent

Citation:

Oudejans, L., D. See, C. Dodds, AND M. Corlew. Physical Removal Options for Porous/Permeable Materials Contaminated with a Persistent Chemical Warfare Agent. Presented at 2019 US EPA International Decon R&D Conference, Norfolk, VA, November 19 - 21, 2019.

Impact/Purpose:

In the event of a chemical release incident involving chemical warfare agents (CWAs), porous building materials and permeable coatings may become contaminated with CWAs that absorb into the materials and coatings. Reversal of absorption may not be possible and absorbed CWA may become inaccessible to surface decontaminants that cannot penetrate into those materials or coatings. The best course of remediation may involve physical removal of contaminated materials or coatings. Literature searches were performed to identify physical contamination removal technologies that generate minimal waste and avoid irreparable damage. Two technologies/approaches were selected for bench-scale laboratory studies followed by subsequent experimental evaluation of physical removal efficacy of VX. Results from these tests will be presented. The results of this research will provide the EPA response community as well as other Federal, State, Tribal and Local agencies on tools to decontaminate porous materials in the indoor environment that are contaminated with CWAs.

Description:

The Poster on physical removal options for porous materials contaminated with the chemical warfare agent VX. The results of this research will provide the EPA response community as well as other Federal, State, Tribal and Local agencies on tools to decontaminate porous materials in the indoor environment that are contaminated with CWAs.The poster will be presented at the 2019 US EPA Int. Decontamination Research & Development Conference

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ POSTER)
Product Published Date:11/08/2019
Record Last Revised:11/12/2019
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 347376