Improved polymer equipment can smell explosives and bombs
Researchers have successfully developed innovative polymer devices that detect small amounts of explosive vapors. This work is described in the sheet
Researchers have successfully developed innovative polymer devices that detect small amounts of explosive vapors. This work is described in the sheet
Polymer molecules (photo: greenfacts)
"Nature" (May 14, 2005), which could lead to the development of super-sensitive sensors that detect explosives and bombs.
The inventors included Aimee Rose and colleagues at MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA), using synthetic materials commonly known as semiconductor (SOP) polymers in their designs. When exposed to laser light, the type of compound produces a separate ' light ' , a process called lasing. The explosive molecules such as TNT (trinitrotoleune) lack electrons, so they are attracted to electron-rich polymers. When they stick to the surface, they interfere with the process of laser light production, resulting in a reduction in the light output of the SOP. By measuring changes in laser light, scientists can easily detect TNT with concentrations less than 5 parts per billion.
This group also successfully identified DNT (dintrotoluene) at 100 parts per billion in just 1 second. SOP was used to locate anti-personnel mines. However, the new device for sensitivity (with explosive vapor) is 30 times higher than the older and more accurate 98%
Le Dao
- Development of liquid explosive sniffing materials
- What is a thermo-weapon?
- The terrible truth about the damage of nail bombs
- China trains rats to detect bombs
- Scientists spread bacteria onto Nazi bombs submerged under the sea
- The 5 most powerful non-nuclear explosives in the world
- National Geographic: 20 million tons of TNT cannot
- 4 inventions destroy most people in the world
- New compound is 1.5 times stronger than TNT
- Find out how to make super-strong explosives at relatively low pressures
Công ty Mỹ phát triển tàu tốc độ 250km/h bay sát mặt nước New battery works even when folded or cut in half Building a battery that can generate electricity from the atmosphere on Mars Electrode technology helps produce hydrogen fuel from seawater Phone case with solar power generation function China develops super powerful acoustic laser technology Rotary engines help aircraft reach supersonic speeds Designing AI aircraft without pilots