Lohia Mechatronik kabra plastic extrusion machinery Used Compounding Line for Masterbatches Lohia-tape-plant Hitco Mamta reliance-polymers
Lohia Mechatronik
kabra plastic extrusion machinery
Used Compounding Line for Masterbatches
Lohia-tape-plant
Hitco
Mamta
reliance-polymers
Technical Papers Plastics
Bomb sniffing dogs could be replaced with bomb-detecting polymer

Bomb sniffing dogs could be replaced with bomb-detecting polymer

A chemical that is often the key ingredient in improvised explosive devices (IEDs) can be quickly and safely detected in trace amounts by a new polymer created by a team of Cornell chemists. The polymer, which potentially could be used in low-cost, handheld explosive detectors and could supplement or replace bomb-sniffing dogs, was invented in the lab of William Dichtel, assistant professor of chemistry and chemical biology. RDX, short for research department explosive, is an explosive material common in military and industrial applications that is also a favorite of bomb-making terrorists. It requires a detonator to explode, but when detonated, it’s more powerful than TNT. What’s more, RDX’s vapor pressure is 1,000 times lower than TNT’s, making it almost impossible to detect without direct contact with a concentrator, like the swabs used at airport security.

康奈尔大学的Dichtel和研究生Deepti戈帕lakrishnan made a polymer that uses fluorescence to quickly and accurately ascertain whether RDX is present on a surface or in the air. “One of the goals is to make detectors that can detect not just explosives on someone’s hands, but in the cloud around them,” Dichtel said – much like the dust cloud surrounding Charlie Brown’s friend Pigpen, he said. “If someone had an IED in their bag, it would be nice to not have to open it.” The researchers’ work builds on a previously established technology that uses “fluorescence quenching” as the basis for detecting TNT; in the presence of the explosive, the polymer’s fluorescence shuts off. The polymer has a random, cross-linked structure that allows it to absorb light and transport the resulting energy throughout its structure. After a certain period of time, the polymer releases this energy as light, a process known as fluorescence. If the energy encounters a molecule of explosive as it travels through the polymer, it can be converted into heat instead of light, which causes the polymer to stop glowing. This design allows the polymer fluorescence to sense extremely small amounts of the explosive of interest, enabling identification of IEDs or people who have recently handled them. The experiments also involved testing a host of other chemicals, such as those found in lipstick and sunscreen, to rule out false positives. Dichtel’s general research interest is in new kinds of polymers, particularly two-dimensional polymers, which are extremely orderly in their molecular pattern, like a city grid. While attempting to discover a new two-dimensional polymer, the researchers found this material, which does not have the same type of orderly structure, but turned out to be a perfect match for RDX. The research was supported by a National Science Foundation CAREER Award and the Cornell Center for Materials Research, and the researchers used the Cornell High Energy Synchrotron Source.

Back to Articles

Previous Article

Next Article

{{comment.Name}}made a post.
{{comment.DateTimeStampDisplay}}

{{comment.Comments}}

COMMENTS

0

There are no comments to display. Be the first one to comment!

*

Name Required.

*

Email Id Required.

Email Id Not Valid.

*

Mobile Required.

Email ID and Mobile Number are kept private and will not be shown publicly.
*

Message Required.

Click to Change image Refresh Captcha
Unused tiffin, lunch box moulds

Unused tiffin, lunch box moulds

recycle-plastic

plastic-road

recycle-plastic-bags