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Decontamination of Warfare Agents: Enzymatic Methods for the Removal of B/C Weapons
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Following an introduction on the different types of biological and chemical (B/C) weapons, this practice-oriented handbook explains the application of enzymes to the decontamination of B/C weapons in various scenarios. In addition, examples for the development of novel enzymatic formulations, their storage and handling are presented, so that this new technology may be mastered quickly by environmental scientists and decontamination engineers without prior experience with the use of enzymes.
Based on results previously restricted for military use and inaccessible to the public, this practice-oriented handbook introduces the use of enzymes for fast and efficient decontamination of B/C weapons in various scenarios, including terrorist attacks. It draws on the internationally recognized technological leadership of the German armed forces, whose anti-B/C technology is among the most advanced worldwide. The text is rounded off with a look at future perspectives.
Authors bio: Andre Richardt is the head of Biological and Chemical Decontamination at the German Armed Forces Institute for Protection Technologies in Munster, Germany. Having obtained his degrees from the universities of Cologne and Freiburg, he spent most of his career working for the German armed forces in biological and chemical decontamination. He is also a lecturer at the Helmut-Schmidt-University in Hamburg and a member of various international working groups in weapons decontamination.
Marc-Michael Blum currently works in Munich as an independent contractor of the German army medical corps. He studied chemistry at the Technical University Braunschweig, the Humboldt University Berlin and the University of Birmingham, UK. As a Ph.D. candidate he worked in the group of Prof. H. Rüterjans at the J. W. Goethe University in Frankfurt on the enzyme DFPase from squid. He serves as a reserve officer at the German army NBC defence school, is a member of the Institute of Strategic Studies in London. His research interests include enzyme mechanisms and structural biology with a recent focus on neutron diffraction. In the field of biological and chemical warfare he is interested in new decontamination and detection technologies as well as arms control and disarmament.
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