Aprahamian assisting Armenia in fight against COVID-19

Author: Shelly Goethals

Stern Armenians Web

Ani Aprahamian, Freimann Professor of Physics at the University of Notre Dame, started a program in nuclear medicine at the newly installed Cyclone-18 accelerator in Armenia. She worked toward the production of radioisotopes with the local team, and has gone on to use the laboratory’s resources to fight the impact of COVID-19 in Armenia.

She is in Armenia as a Fulbright Fellow, where she serves as the Director of Armenia’s Alikhanyan National Laboratory in Yerevan. 

Prompted by an Armenian doctor at the Yale Medical School, Aprahamian and her team developed a program that sterilizes materials, equipment, and hospital rooms using ozone gas produced by the ionization of room air. It took just three days for the group to build an ozone generator from various scrap pieces in the laboratory. The Ministry of Health learned of the device and requested an additional 20 ozonators to provide sufficient sterilization capability for the many hundreds of quarantined people’s quarters in Armenia. In parallel, the team also built a sterilization box to sanitize used masks and personal protection equipment (PPE). Next they plan to develop an inexpensive respirator system for patients with respiratory distress.

Originally published by Shelly Goethals at physics.nd.edu on April 10, 2020.