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Dive into the research topics where Daniel A. Lucero is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel A. Lucero.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

Evaluation of a Wipe Surface Sample Method for Collection of Bacillus Spores from Nonporous Surfaces

Gary Stephen Brown; Rita G. Betty; John E. Brockmann; Daniel A. Lucero; Caroline Ann Souza; Kathryn S. Walsh; Raymond M. Boucher; Mathew Tezak; Mollye C. Wilson; Todd Rudolph

ABSTRACT Polyester-rayon blend wipes were evaluated for efficiency of extraction and recovery of powdered Bacillus atrophaeus spores from stainless steel and painted wallboard surfaces. Method limits of detection were also estimated for both surfaces. The observed mean efficiency of polyester-rayon blend wipe recovery from stainless steel was 0.35 with a standard deviation of ±0.12, and for painted wallboard it was 0.29 with a standard deviation of ±0.15. Evaluation of a sonication extraction method for the polyester-rayon blend wipes produced a mean extraction efficiency of 0.93 with a standard deviation of ±0.09. Wipe recovery quantitative limits of detection were estimated at 90 CFU per unit of stainless steel sample area and 105 CFU per unit of painted wallboard sample area. The method recovery efficiency and limits of detection established in this work provide useful guidance for the planning of incident response environmental sampling following the release of a biological agent such as Bacillus anthracis.


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2007

Evaluation of rayon swab surface sample collection method for Bacillus spores from nonporous surfaces

Gary Stephen Brown; Rita G. Betty; John E. Brockmann; Daniel A. Lucero; Caroline Ann Souza; Kathryn S. Walsh; R.M. Boucher; M.S. Tezak; M.C. Wilson; T. Rudolph; H.D.A. Lindquist; K.F. Martinez

Aim:  To evaluate US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended swab surface sample collection method for recovery efficiency and limit of detection for powdered Bacillus spores from nonporous surfaces.


Journal of Environmental Monitoring | 2007

Evaluation of vacuum filter sock surface sample collection method for Bacillus spores from porous and non-porous surfaces

Gary Stephen Brown; Rita G. Betty; John E. Brockmann; Daniel A. Lucero; Caroline Ann Souza; Kathryn S. Walsh; Raymond M. Boucher; Matthew S. Tezak; Mollye C. Wilson

Vacuum filter socks were evaluated for recovery efficiency of powdered Bacillus atrophaeus spores from two non-porous surfaces, stainless steel and painted wallboard and two porous surfaces, carpet and bare concrete. Two surface coupons were positioned side-by-side and seeded with aerosolized Bacillus atrophaeus spores. One of the surfaces, a stainless steel reference coupon, was sized to fit into a sample vial for direct spore removal, while the other surface, a sample surface coupon, was sized for a vacuum collection application. Deposited spore material was directly removed from the reference coupon surface and cultured for enumeration of colony forming units (CFU), while deposited spore material was collected from the sample coupon using the vacuum filter sock method, extracted by sonication and cultured for enumeration. Recovery efficiency, which is a measure of overall transfer effectiveness from the surface to culture, was calculated as the number of CFU enumerated from the filter sock sample per unit area relative to the number of CFU enumerated from the co-located reference coupon per unit area. The observed mean filter sock recovery efficiency from stainless steel was 0.29 (SD = 0.14, n = 36), from painted wallboard was 0.25 (SD = 0.15, n = 36), from carpet was 0.28 (SD = 0.13, n = 40) and from bare concrete was 0.19 (SD = 0.14, n = 44). Vacuum filter sock recovery quantitative limits of detection were estimated at 105 CFU m(-2) from stainless steel and carpet, 120 CFU m(-2) from painted wallboard and 160 CFU m(-2) from bare concrete. The method recovery efficiency and limits of detection established in this work provide useful guidance for the planning of incident response environmental sampling for biological agents such as Bacillus anthracis.


Aerosol Science and Technology | 1991

Stage Response Calibration of the Mark III and Marple Personal Cascade Impactors

Daniel J. Rader; Lisa Ann Mondy; John E. Brockmann; Daniel A. Lucero; Kenneth L. Rubow

Experimental and correlated stage responses (the fraction of particles entering an impactor that are collected on a stage) are presented for the Andersen Mark III and Marple personal cascade impactors. The impactors were operated upright and fully assembled so that interstage interference and wall losses could be properly studied. The observed stage responses showed maxima that fell significantly short of unity, meaning that a monodisperse aerosol is never collected exclusively on one stage, but is distributed among several stages and internal losses. Correlations for the stage responses are presented so that the experimental results can be used to determine size distributions with available data-inversion algorithms. Simulations with log-normal distributions show significant differences between dpa50 histograms and the more accurate distributions that result by taking the response functions into account.


Aerosol Science and Technology | 1990

A Method To Employ the Aerodynamic Particle Sizer Factory Calibration Under Different Operating Conditions

D. J. Rader; John E. Brockmann; D. L. Ceman; Daniel A. Lucero

The dimensionless aerodynamic particle sizer (APS) response function (normalized particle velocity against particle Stokes number) first reported by Chen et al. (1985) is explored for much larger solid particles (diameters to 35 μm) over a similar range of instrument pressures (624–l740 mm Hg) and flow rates (4.2–6.0 L/min). An essentially unique response function is found for low and intermediate Stokes numbers under a variety of operating conditions, including the use of argon as the carrier gas. For large particles, however, non-Stokesian drag effects introduce systematic differences among calibration sets so that a unique response function no longer applies. The largest differences are observed between calibrations performed in air and argon, although even in this case the sizing error amounts to < 12% for a 20-μm polystyrene latex sphere. For intermediate Stokes numbers, a direct consequence of this work is that a reference calibration (channel number against Stokes number) can be used under differen...


Aerosol Science and Technology | 1988

Calibration of the Aerodynamic Particle Sizer 3310 (APS-3310) with Polystyrene Latex Monodisperse Spheres and Oleic Acid Monodisperse Particles

John E. Brockmann; Norihiro Yamano; Daniel A. Lucero

We have calibrated the new, extended-range aerodynamic particle sizer (model APS-3310, TSI, Inc.) with polystyrene latex monodisperse spheres and compared the response to that of oleic acid monodisperse particles from 2.5 to 38.7 μm in diameter. The results compare well with previous findings and cover a larger size range permitted by the new instrument.


Archive | 2006

Joint Sandia/NIOSH exercise on aerosol contamination using the BROOM tool.

James L. Ramsey; Brad Melton; Patrick D. Finley; John Brockman; Chad E. Peyton; Mark D. Tucker; Wayne Einfeld; Gary Stephen Brown; Richard O. Griffith; Daniel A. Lucero; Robert G. Knowlton; Sean Andrew McKenna; Pauline Ho

In February of 2005, a joint exercise involving Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) was conducted in Albuquerque, NM. The SNL participants included the team developing the Building Restoration Operations and Optimization Model (BROOM), a software product developed to expedite sampling and data management activities applicable to facility restoration following a biological contamination event. Integrated data-collection, data-management, and visualization software improve the efficiency of cleanup, minimize facility downtime, and provide a transparent basis for reopening. The exercise was held at an SNL facility, the Coronado Club, a now-closed social club for Sandia employees located on Kirtland Air Force Base. Both NIOSH and SNL had specific objectives for the exercise, and all objectives were met.


Archive | 2006

Spent Fuel Sabotage Aerosol Test Program: FY 2005-06 Testing and Aerosol Data Summary

Michael Warren Gregson; John E. Brockmann; Oliver Nolte; Olivier Loiseau; Wolfgang Koch; Martin Alan Molecke; Bruno A. Autrusson; Gunter Guido Pretzsch; M.C. Billone; Daniel A. Lucero; Tatiana Burtseva; Wenzel Brucher; Michele D. Steyskal

This multinational, multi-phase spent fuel sabotage test program is quantifying the aerosol particles produced when the products of a high energy density device (HEDD) interact with and explosively particulate test rodlets that contain pellets of either surrogate materials or actual spent fuel. This program has been underway for several years. This program provides source-term data that are relevant to some sabotage scenarios in relation to spent fuel transport and storage casks, and associated risk assessments. This document focuses on an updated description of the test program and test components for all work and plans made, or revised, primarily during FY 2005 and about the first two-thirds of FY 2006. It also serves as a program status report as of the end of May 2006. We provide details on the significant findings on aerosol results and observations from the recently completed Phase 2 surrogate material tests using cerium oxide ceramic pellets in test rodlets plus non-radioactive fission product dopants. Results include: respirable fractions produced; amounts, nuclide content, and produced particle size distributions and morphology; status on determination of the spent fuel ratio, SFR (the ratio of respirable particles from real spent fuel/respirables from surrogate spent fuel, measured under closely matched test conditions, in a contained test chamber); and, measurements of enhanced volatile fission product species sorption onto respirable particles. We discuss progress and results for the first three, recently performed Phase 3 tests using depleted uranium oxide, DUO{sub 2}, test rodlets. We will also review the status of preparations and the final Phase 4 tests in this program, using short rodlets containing actual spent fuel from U.S. PWR reactors, with both high- and lower-burnup fuel. These data plus testing results and design are tailored to support and guide, follow-on computer modeling of aerosol dispersal hazards and radiological consequence assessments. This spent fuel sabotage--aerosol test program, performed primarily at Sandia National Laboratories, with support provided by both the U.S. Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, had significant inputs from, and is strongly supported and coordinated by both the U.S. and international program participants in Germany, France, and the U.K., as part of the international Working Group for Sabotage Concerns of Transport and Storage Casks, WGSTSC.


Archive | 2016

NSA Monthly Report- July 2016.

Frederick M. Helsel; Daniel A. Lucero; Darielle Dexheimer

This monthly report is intended to communicate the status of North Slope ARM facilities managed by Sandia National Labs.


Archive | 2012

Aerosol tests conducted at Aberdeen Proving Grounds MD.

John E. Brockmann; Daniel A. Lucero; Brandon Lee Servantes; Matthew G Hankins

Test data are reported that demonstrate the deposition from a spray dispersion system (Illinois Tool Works inductively charging rotary atomization nozzle) for application of decontamination solution to various surfaces in the passenger cabin of a Boeing 737 aircraft. The decontamination solution (EnviroTru) was tagged with a known concentration of fluorescein permitting determination of both airborne decontaminant concentration and surface deposited decontaminant solution so that the effective deposition rates and surface coverage could be determined and correlated with the amount of material sprayed. Six aerosol dispersion tests were conducted. In each test, aluminum foil deposition coupons were set out throughout the passenger area and the aerosol was dispersed. The aerosol concentration was measured with filter samplers as well as with optical techniques Average aerosol deposition ranged from 3 to 15 grams of decontamination solution per square meter. Some disagreement was observed between various instruments utilizing different measurement principles. These results demonstrate a potentially effective method to disperse decontaminant to interior surfaces of a passenger aircraft.

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Dive into the Daniel A. Lucero's collaboration.

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John E. Brockmann

Sandia National Laboratories

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Mark D. Tucker

Sandia National Laboratories

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Rita G. Betty

Sandia National Laboratories

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Gary Stephen Brown

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Andres L. Sanchez

Sandia National Laboratories

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Darielle Dexheimer

Sandia National Laboratories

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Frederick M. Helsel

Sandia National Laboratories

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Caroline Ann Souza

Sandia National Laboratories

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Kathryn S. Walsh

Sandia National Laboratories

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