Abstract

Discrimination between hazardous materials in the environment and ambient constituents is a fundamental problem in environmental sensing. The ubiquity of naturally occurring bacteria, plant pollen, fungi, and other airborne materials makes the task of sensing for biological warfare (BW) agents particularly challenging. The spectroscopic properties of the chemical warfare (CW) agents in the long wavelength infrared (LWIR) region are important physical properties that have been successfully exploited for environmental sensing. However, in the case of BW agents, the LWIR region affords less distinction between hazardous and ambient materials. Recent studies of the THz spectroscopic properties of biological agent simulants, particularly bacterial spores, have yielded interesting and potentially useful spectral signatures of these materials. It is anticipated that with the advent of new THz sources and detectors, a novel environmental sensor could be designed that exploits the peculiar spectral properties of the biological materials. We will present data on the molecular spectroscopy of several CW agents and simulants as well as some THz spectroscopy of the BW agent simulants that we have studied to date, and discuss the prospectus with regard to detection probabilities through the application of sensor system modeling.

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