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Characterizing biological aerosol in a chamber: an approach to estimation of viable organisms in a single biological particle
Authors:Jim Ho  Melvin Spence  Jim Ogston
Institution:(1) Defence Research Establishment Suffield, Box 4000, Medicine Hat, Alberta, T1A 8K6, Canada
Abstract:There are practical and valid reasons topresent biological field trial referenceresults as agent containing particles per literof air (ACPLA). However, workers in biologicalaerosol research have a need to know how manyviable individual organisms are contained in asingle particle of a given diameter. Anecdotalevidence may exist suggesting that the task hasbeen accomplished but without a way toreplicate the measurements, it is difficult toaccept unsubstantiated claims. It is verydifficult to declare a finite number thatsatisfies all the experimental requirements, asthe problem is a statistical probability issue. This paper describes a method for estimatingthe number with practical instructions forreplicating the work in other laboratories.The test aerosol was contained in a 90 m3chamber at concentrations as low as 5 ACPLA. Amodified version of slit sampler collectedviable particles. A statistical method was usedto demonstrate sampling predictability at 95%confidence level. By using glass fiber filtersmounted in a dichotomous sampler, samplingefficiencies were estimated for a variety ofcommon aerosol collectors. The accumulated datapermitted the estimation of the number ofviable spores per particle. For a 2.5 to4 µm particle, arguments have beenpresented for considering 4.5 as the mostprobable ACPLA value.
Keywords:aerosol chamber  Bacillus subtilus  BG spores  biological aerosol  dichotomous sampler  number of organisms in a particle  slit sampler
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