Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Andres L. Sanchez is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Andres L. Sanchez.


Aerosol Science and Technology | 2013

Experimental Study of Electrostatic Aerosol Filtration at Moderate Filter Face Velocity

Andres L. Sanchez; Joshua Allen Hubbard; Jennifer Dellinger; Brandon Lee Servantes

Aerosol collection efficiency was studied for electrostatically charged fibrous filters (3M Filtrete™, BMF-20F). In this study, collection efficiencies at moderate filter face velocities (0.5–2.5 m/s) representative of some high volume sampling applications was characterized. Experimental data and analytical theories of filter performance are less common in this flow regime since the viscous flow field assumption may not be representative of actual flow through the filter mat. Additionally, electrostatic fiber charge density is difficult to quantify, and measurements of aerosol collection efficiency are often used to calculate this fundamental parameter. The purpose of this study was to assess the relative influence of diffusion, inertial impaction, interception, and electrostatic filtration on overall filter performance. The effects of fiber charge density were quantified by comparing efficiency data for charged and uncharged filter media, where an isopropanol bath was used to eliminate electrostatic charge. The effects of particle charge were also quantified by test aerosols brought into the equilibrium Boltzmann charge distribution, and then using an electrostatic precipitator to separate out only those test particles with a charge of zero. Electrostatically charged filter media had collection efficiencies as high as 70–85% at 30 nm. Filter performance was reduced significantly (40–50% collection efficiency) when the electrostatic filtration component was eliminated. Experiments performed with zero charged NaCl particles showed that a significant increase in filter performance is attributable to an induction effect, where electrostatic fiber charge polarizes aerosol particles without charge. As filter face velocity increased the electrostatic filtration efficiency decreased since aerosol particles had less time to drift toward electrostatically charged fibers. Finally, experimental data at 0.5 m/s were compared to theoretical predictions and good agreement was found for both electrostatic and nonelectrostatic effects.


Water Research | 2010

Systematic analysis of micromixers to minimize biofouling on reverse osmosis membranes.

Susan Jeanne Altman; Lucas K. McGrath; Howland D. T. Jones; Andres L. Sanchez; Rm Noek; Paul G. Clem; Adam W. Cook; Clifford K. Ho

Micromixers, UV-curable epoxy traces printed on the surface of a reverse osmosis membrane, were tested on a cross-flow system to determine their success at reducing biofouling. Biofouling was quantified by measuring the rate of permeate flux decline and the median bacteria concentration on the surface of the membrane (as determined by fluorescence intensity counts due to nucleic acid stains as measured by hyperspectral imaging). The micromixers do not appear to significantly increase the pressure needed to maintain the same initial permeate flux and salt rejection. Chevrons helped prevent biofouling of the membranes in comparison with blank membranes. The chevron design controlled where the bacteria adhered to the membrane surface. However, blank membranes with spacers had a lower rate of permeate flux decline than the membranes with chevrons despite having greater bacteria concentrations on their surfaces. With better optimization of the micromixer design, the micromixers could be used to control where the bacteria will adhere to the surface and create a more biofouling resistant membrane that will help to drive down the cost of water treatment.


Archive | 2009

Analysis of micromixers and biocidal coatings on water-treatment membranes to minimize biofouling.

Stephen W. Webb; Darryl L. James; Michael R. Hibbs; Howland D. T. Jones; William Eugene Hart; Siri S. Khalsa; Susan Jeanne Altman; Paul G. Clem; Menachem Elimelech; Christopher James Cornelius; Andres L. Sanchez; Rachael M. Noek; Clifford K. Ho; Seokatae Kang; Amy Cha-Tien Sun; Atar Adout; Lucas K. McGrath; Malynda A. Cappelle; Adam W. Cook

Biofouling, the unwanted growth of biofilms on a surface, of water-treatment membranes negatively impacts in desalination and water treatment. With biofouling there is a decrease in permeate production, degradation of permeate water quality, and an increase in energy expenditure due to increased cross-flow pressure needed. To date, a universal successful and cost-effect method for controlling biofouling has not been implemented. The overall goal of the work described in this report was to use high-performance computing to direct polymer, material, and biological research to create the next generation of water-treatment membranes. Both physical (micromixers - UV-curable epoxy traces printed on the surface of a water-treatment membrane that promote chaotic mixing) and chemical (quaternary ammonium groups) modifications of the membranes for the purpose of increasing resistance to biofouling were evaluated. Creation of low-cost, efficient water-treatment membranes helps assure the availability of fresh water for human use, a growing need in both the U. S. and the world.


Archive | 2008

Use of ceragenins to create novel biofouling resistant water-treatment membranes.

Michael R. Hibbs; Susan Jeanne Altman; Yanshu Feng; Paul B. Savage; Jacob Pollard; Andres L. Sanchez; Benjamin D. Fellows; Howland D. T. Jones; Lucas K. McGrath

Scoping studies have demonstrated that ceragenins, when linked to water-treatment membranes have the potential to create biofouling resistant water-treatment membranes. Ceragenins are synthetically produced molecules that mimic antimicrobial peptides. Evidence includes measurements of CSA-13 prohibiting the growth of and killing planktonic Pseudomonas fluorescens. In addition, imaging of biofilms that were in contact of a ceragenin showed more dead cells relative to live cells than in a biofilm that had not been treated with a ceragenin. This work has demonstrated that ceragenins can be attached to polyamide reverse osmosis (RO) membranes, though work needs to improve the uniformity of the attachment. Finally, methods have been developed to use hyperspectral imaging with multivariate curve resolution to view ceragenins attached to the RO membrane. Future work will be conducted to better attach the ceragenin to the RO membranes and more completely test the biocidal effectiveness of the ceragenins on the membranes.


Degraded Environments: Sensing, Processing, and Display 2018 | 2018

Ongoing work and improvements at the Sandia Fog Facility (Conference Presentation)

Jeremy B. Wright; John D. van der Laan; Andres L. Sanchez

Degraded visual environments are a cause of problems for surveillance systems and other sensors due to the reduction in contrast, range, and signal. Fog is a concern because of the frequency of its formation along our coastlines; disrupting border security, shipping, surveillance, and sometimes causing deadly accidents. Fog reduces visibility by scattering ambient/active illumination light obscuring the environment and limiting operational capability. Sandia has created a fog facility for the characterization and testing of optical and other systems. This facility is a 180 ft. by 10 ft. by 10 ft. chamber with temperature control that can be filled with a fog-like aerosol using 64 agricultural spray nozzles. We will discuss the physical formation of fog and how that is affected by the environmental controls at our disposal. We have recently made several improvements to the facility including temperature control and will present the results of these improvements on the aerosol conditions. We will discuss the characterization of the fog and instrumentation used for the characterization. In addition, we will present preliminary results from work at Sandia, that leveraged this facility to investigate using polarized light to enhance the range of optical systems in fog conditions. This capability provides a platform for performing optical propagations experiments in a known, stable, and controlled environment where fog can be made on demand.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2017

Optical characterization of the Sandia fog facility

Jeremy B. Wright; John D. van der Laan; Andres L. Sanchez; Shanalyn A. Kemme; David Scrymgeour

Degraded visual environments are a serious concern for modern sensing and surveillance systems. Fog is of interest due to the frequency of its formation along our coastlines disrupting border security and surveillance. Fog presents hurdles in intelligence and reconnaissance by preventing data collection with optical systems for extended periods. We will present recent results from our work in operating optical systems in our controlled fog experimental chamber. This facility is a 180-foot-long, 10-foot-wide, and 10-foot-tall structure that has over 60 spray nozzles to achieve uniform aerosol coverage with various particle size, distributions, and densities. We will discuss the physical formation of fog in nature and how our generated fog compares. In addition, we will discuss fog distributions and characterization techniques. We will investigate the biases of different methods and discuss the different techniques that are appropriate for realistic environments. Finally, we will compare the data obtained from our characterization studies against accepted models (e.g., MODTRAN) and validate the usage of this unique capability as a controlled experimental realization of natural fog formations. By proving the capability, we will enable the testing and validation of future fog penetrating optical systems and providing a platform for performing optical propagation experimentation in a known, stable, and controlled environment.


Archive | 2014

A laboratory exposure system to study the effects of aging on super-micron aerosol particles

Joshua Santarpia; Andres L. Sanchez; Gabriel Anthony Lucero; Brandon Lee Servantes; Joshua Allen Hubbard

A laboratory system was constructed that allows the super-micron particles to be aged for long periods of time under conditions that can simulate a range of natural environments and conditions, including relative humidity, oxidizing chemicals, organics and simulated solar radiation. Two proof-of-concept experiments using a non-biological simulant for biological particles and a biological simulant demonstrate the utility of these types of aging experiments. Green Visolite®, which is often used as a tracer material for model validation experiments, does not degrade with exposure to simulated solar radiation, the actual biological material does. This would indicate that Visolite® should be a good tracer compound for mapping the extent of a biological release using fluorescence as an indicator, but that it should not be used to simulate the decay of a biological particle when exposed to sunlight. The decay in the fluorescence measured for B. thurengiensis is similar to what has been previously observed in outdoor environments.


Archive | 2012

Enhanced Micellar Catalysis LDRD

Rita G. Betty; Mark D. Tucker; Gretchen Taggart; Mark K. Kinnan; Crystal Chanea Glen; Danielle Rivera; Andres L. Sanchez; Todd Michael Alam

The primary goals of the Enhanced Micellar Catalysis project were to gain an understanding of the micellar environment of DF-200, or similar liquid CBW surfactant-based decontaminants, as well as characterize the aerosolized DF-200 droplet distribution and droplet chemistry under baseline ITW rotary atomization conditions. Micellar characterization of limited surfactant solutions was performed externally through the collection and measurement of Small Angle X-Ray Scattering (SAXS) images and Cryo-Transmission Electron Microscopy (cryo-TEM) images. Micellar characterization was performed externally at the University of Minnesotas Characterization Facility Center, and at the Argonne National Laboratory Advanced Photon Source facility. A micellar diffusion study was conducted internally at Sandia to measure diffusion constants of surfactants over a concentration range, to estimate the effective micelle diameter, to determine the impact of individual components to the micellar environment in solution, and the impact of combined components to surfactant phase behavior. Aerosolized DF-200 sprays were characterized for particle size and distribution and limited chemical composition. Evaporation rates of aerosolized DF-200 sprays were estimated under a set of baseline ITW nozzle test system parameters.


Desalination | 2012

Membrane treatment of side-stream cooling tower water for reduction of water usage

Susan Jeanne Altman; Richard P. Jensen; Malynda A. Cappelle; Andres L. Sanchez; Randy L. Everett; Howard L. Anderson; Lucas K. McGrath


Archive | 2010

Evaluation of peroxide-based solutions for facility decontamination by owner/occupants.

Andres L. Sanchez; Mollye C. Wilson; Wayne Einfeld; Ashley N. Allen; Daniel A. Lucero; Brandon Lee Servantes; Mark D. Tucker; Matthew S. Tezak

Collaboration


Dive into the Andres L. Sanchez's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel A. Lucero

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Crystal Chanea Glen

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark D. Tucker

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Susan Jeanne Altman

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John E. Brockmann

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joshua Allen Hubbard

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lucas K. McGrath

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark S. Johnson

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matthew S. Tezak

Sandia National Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge