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Terry Penrod
April 23rd, 2004, 01:57 pm
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The following article outlines a whole new type of life-saving body armor that could save countless lives in the military, law enforcement, anti terrorist units and other applications using a blend of lightweight Kevlar with a layer of liquid comprised of both hard and soft components utilizing silica that is manipulated at the nano level.

I see a huge array of practical uses for nano technology in the very near future and am glad to see this type of development so soon.

Cheers, Terry

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FROM:

http://story.news.yahoo.com/fc?cid=34&tmpl=fc&in=World&cat=Iraq
( via www.military.co )


Army Scientists, Engineers develop Liquid Body Armor

By Tonya Johnson
Army News Service
April 21, 2004

ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. -- Liquid armor for Kevlar vests is one of the newest technologies being developed at the U.S. Army Research Laboratory to save Soldiers' lives.

This type of body armor is light and flexible, which allows soldiers to be more mobile and won't hinder an individual from running or aiming his or her weapon.

The key component of liquid armor is a shear thickening fluid. STF is composed of hard particles suspended in a liquid. The liquid, polyethylene glycol, is non-toxic, and can withstand a wide range of temperatures. Hard, nano-particles of silica are the other components of STF. This combination of flowable and hard components results in a material with unusual properties.

"During normal handling, the STF is very deformable and flows like a liquid. However, once a bullet or frag hits the vest, it transitions to a rigid material, which prevents the projectile from penetrating the Soldier's body," said Dr. Eric Wetzel, a mechanical engineer from the Weapons and Materials Research Directorate who heads the project team.

To make liquid armor, STF is soaked into all layers of the Kevlar vest. The Kevlar fabric holds the STF in place, and also helps to stop the bullet. The saturated fabric can be soaked, draped, and sewn just like any other fabric.

Wetzel and his team have been working on this technology with Dr. Norman J. Wagner and his students from the University of Delaware for three years.

"The goal of the technology is to create a new material that is low cost and lightweight which offers equivalent or superior ballistic properties as compared to current Kevlar fabric, but has more flexibility and less thickness," said Wetzel. "This technology has a lot of potential."

Liquid armor is still undergoing laboratory tests, but Wetzel is enthusiastic about other applications that the technology might be applied to.

"The sky's the limit," said Wetzel. "We would first like to put this material in a soldier's sleeves and pants, areas that aren't protected by ballistic vests but need to remain flexible. We could also use this material for bomb blankets, to cover suspicious packages or unexploded ordnance. Liquid armor could even be applied to jump boots, so that they would stiffen during impact to support Soldiers' ankles."

In addition to saving Soldiers' lives, Wetzel said liquid armor in Kevlar vests could help those who work in law enforcement.

"Prison guards and police officers could also benefit from this technology," said Wetzel. "Liquid armor is much more stab resistant than conventional body armor. This capability is especially important for prison guards, who are most often attacked with handmade sharp weapons."

For their work on liquid armor, Wetzel and his team were awarded the 2002 Paul A. Siple Award, the Army's highest award for scientific achievement, at the Army Science Conference.

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Mara
April 23rd, 2004, 03:01 pm
Very interesting. It seems like all the kinds of things and materials we read about in science fiction and comic books are becoming reality.

Ravanor
April 23rd, 2004, 09:55 pm
Wonder if they somehow put this liquid on cars they might be more damage resistant. Fender benders might become a thing of the past.

Terry Penrod
April 24th, 2004, 07:43 pm
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Wonder if they somehow put this liquid on cars they might be more damage resistant. Fender benders might become a thing of the past.

Yes and they are already experimenting with far more durable automotive and other paints, enamel coatings, nautical ship / submarine hull coatings, aerodynamic plane fuselage skins, etc. and bonding agents to make most scratches, cracks, chips and color fading a thing of the past while vastly improving air / water flow efficencies and decreasing maintenance / repair costs.

The nanotech applications for things like highly effective, safe cancer treatments using gold plated Buckyball nano molecules to deliver specific tumor-eating proteins, plus overall energy efficiency and bio-cleanups alone will be worth their weight in gold and very well could solve most or all these serious problems in the near future.

BTW, when those cancer eaters are done, all they leave behind is a combination of carbon (the former cancer cells) and the miniscule amount of gold (used for tracking the nano deliver system to the precise location of the tumor within the body) - both of which are automatically flushed from the human body naturally - with no ill side effects at all.

Cheers, Terry

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Nyghtfall
April 25th, 2004, 03:13 am
That's all well and good, but it ain't gonna help for jack if the Pentagon doesn't SHIP IT TO THEM!!!!

As it stands, family members of soldiers currently in Iraq are having to buy body armor and ship it to the soldiers, themselves, because the Pentagon can't seem to supply armor for them. As a result, we have soldiers dying in fire fights because they aren't wearing effective body armor.