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Dive into the research topics where Teri Lalain is active.

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Featured researches published by Teri Lalain.


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2013

Characterization of chemical agent transport in paints.

Matthew P. Willis; Wesley O. Gordon; Teri Lalain; Brent A. Mantooth

A combination of vacuum-based vapor emission measurements with a mass transport model was employed to determine the interaction of chemical warfare agents with various materials, including transport parameters of agents in paints. Accurate determination of mass transport parameters enables the simulation of the chemical agent distribution in a material for decontaminant performance modeling. The evaluation was performed with the chemical warfare agents bis(2-chloroethyl) sulfide (distilled mustard, known as the chemical warfare blister agent HD) and O-ethyl S-[2-(diisopropylamino)ethyl] methylphosphonothioate (VX), an organophosphate nerve agent, deposited on to two different types of polyurethane paint coatings. The results demonstrated alignment between the experimentally measured vapor emission flux and the predicted vapor flux. Mass transport modeling demonstrated rapid transport of VX into the coatings; VX penetrated through the aliphatic polyurethane-based coating (100 μm) within approximately 107 min. By comparison, while HD was more soluble in the coatings, the penetration depth in the coatings was approximately 2× lower than VX. Applications of mass transport parameters include the ability to predict agent uptake, and subsequent long-term vapor emission or contact transfer where the agent could present exposure risks. Additionally, these parameters and model enable the ability to perform decontamination modeling to predict how decontaminants remove agent from these materials.


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2013

Physics-based agent to simulant correlations for vapor phase mass transport.

Matthew P. Willis; Mark J. Varady; Thomas P. Pearl; Janet C. Fouse; Patrick C. Riley; Brent A. Mantooth; Teri Lalain

Chemical warfare agent simulants are often used as an agent surrogate to perform environmental testing, mitigating exposure hazards. This work specifically addresses the assessment of downwind agent vapor concentration resulting from an evaporating simulant droplet. A previously developed methodology was used to estimate the mass diffusivities of the chemical warfare agent simulants methyl salicylate, 2-chloroethyl ethyl sulfide, di-ethyl malonate, and chloroethyl phenyl sulfide. Along with the diffusivity of the chemical warfare agent bis(2-chloroethyl) sulfide, the simulant diffusivities were used in an advection-diffusion model to predict the vapor concentrations downwind from an evaporating droplet of each chemical at various wind velocities and temperatures. The results demonstrate that the simulant-to-agent concentration ratio and the corresponding vapor pressure ratio are equivalent under certain conditions. Specifically, the relationship is valid within ranges of measurement locations relative to the evaporating droplet and observation times. The valid ranges depend on the relative transport properties of the agent and simulant, and whether vapor transport is diffusion or advection dominant.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

Multifunctional ultra-high vacuum apparatus for studies of the interactions of chemical warfare agents on complex surfaces

Amanda R. Wilmsmeyer; Wesley O. Gordon; Erin Durke Davis; Brent A. Mantooth; Teri Lalain; John Morris

A fundamental understanding of the surface chemistry of chemical warfare agents is needed to fully predict the interaction of these toxic molecules with militarily relevant materials, catalysts, and environmental surfaces. For example, rules for predicting the surface chemistry of agents can be applied to the creation of next generation decontaminants, reactive coatings, and protective materials for the warfighter. Here, we describe a multifunctional ultra-high vacuum instrument for conducting comprehensive studies of the adsorption, desorption, and surface chemistry of chemical warfare agents on model and militarily relevant surfaces. The system applies reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and mass spectrometry to study adsorption and surface reactions of chemical warfare agents. Several novel components have been developed to address the unique safety and sample exposure challenges that accompany the research of these toxic, often very low vapor pressure, compounds. While results of vacuum-based surface science techniques may not necessarily translate directly to environmental processes, learning about the fundamental chemistry will begin to inform scientists about the critical aspects that impact real-world applications.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2013

Infrared Spectra and Binding Energies of Chemical Warfare Nerve Agent Simulants on the Surface of Amorphous Silica

Amanda R. Wilmsmeyer; Wesley O. Gordon; Erin Durke Davis; Diego Troya; Brent A. Mantooth; Teri Lalain; John Morris


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Novel Methodology for the Estimation of Chemical Warfare Agent Mass Transport Dynamics. Part II: Absorption

Matthew P. Willis; Brent A. Mantooth; Teri Lalain


Archive | 2010

Material Demand Studies: Materials Sorption of Vaporized Hydrogen Peroxide

Lawrence R. Procell; Zoe A. Hess; David G. Gehring; Joseph T. Lynn; Philip W. Bartram; Teri Lalain; Shawn Ryan; Brian Attwood; Blair Martin; Mark D. Brickhouse


Archive | 2007

Evaluation of the Steris Sensitive Equipment Decontamination (SED) Apparatus on a 463L Pallet

Teri Lalain; Mark D. Brickhouse; Jerry W. Pfarr; John P. Lloyd; James Flowers; Brent A. Mantooth; David Stark; Zach Zander


Archive | 2011

Low-Level Analytical Methodology Updates to Support Decontaminant Performance Evaluations

Matthew Shue; Teri Lalain; Brent A. Mantooth; Pamela Humphreys; Morgan Hall; Phil Smith; Michelle Sheahy


Archive | 2010

Chemical Warfare Agent Decontamination Efficacy Testing Large-Scale Chamber mVHP (registered trademerk) Decontamination System Evaluation

Teri Lalain; Brent A. Mantooth; Mark D. Brickhouse; Stan Gater; Kirk Williams; Jim Hendershot; David Stark


Archive | 2012

Chemical Contaminant and Decontaminant Test Methodology Source Document. Second Edition

Teri Lalain; Brent A. Mantooth; Matthew Shue; Shawn Pusey; Diane Wylie

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Brent A. Mantooth

Pennsylvania State University

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Matthew P. Willis

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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Shawn Ryan

Research Triangle Park

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Wesley O. Gordon

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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Erin Durke Davis

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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John Morris

Indiana University Northwest

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Janet C. Fouse

Science Applications International Corporation

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Kenneth B. Sumpter

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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Mark J. Varady

Edgewood Chemical Biological Center

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