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  • SINCE JANUARY 2011, MORE THAN 10,000 IMPROVISED EXPLOSIVE DEVICES OR IED EVENTS HAVE OCCURED

  • IN MORE THAN 112 COUNTRIES. THE ABILITY TO DETECT CHEMICALS USED IN EXPLOSIVES

  • CAN SAVE OUR SOLDIERS' AND CIVILIANS' LIVES. DR. CHRIS FIELD AND THE SCIENTISTS AT THE

  • NAVAL RESEARCH LABORATORY HAVE DEVELOPED A PATENT PENDING PROCESS, USING SILICON FOR

  • A SENSOR THAT MAY REVOLUTIONIZE THE WAY WE LOOK AT TRACE CHEMICAL DETECTION.

  • IT IS CALLED SiN-VAPOR. Detecting IED's in the battlefield or explosives

  • at airports is a complex problem because it is a trace chemical detection problem. And

  • what that really means is that IEDs and the compounds we are interested in don't really

  • want to be in the gas phase. And that's where we need them to be in order to do our

  • detection. So they need to be up in the air. But these are easily masked or overshadowed

  • by a more abundant compound such as perfume or diesel exhaust.

  • DOGS AND LABORATORY GRADE EQUIPMENT ARE THE CURRENT SATE OF THE ART FOR TRACE CHEMICAL

  • DETECTION, BUT BOTH ARE EXPENSIVE AND REQUIRE A TRAINED PROFFESIONAL

  • TO HANDLE THE SENSORS DR. FIELD HAS BEEN WORKING ON

  • ARE AN EXAMPLE OF NANOTECHNOLOGY. Nanoscale is 1x10 to the negative nine meters

  • which is the scientific definition. Another way of putting it is let us assume

  • that the diameter of a human hair is 100 microns. So if you can take the diameter of a human

  • hair, cut it down, and look at the cross sectional area. We can fit a million of our nanowires

  • in the cross sectional area of a single human hair.

  • So what is really needed for the soldier, and the warfighter, and at airports is small

  • portable, light weight, low power, low overhead sensors that you can give to everybody and

  • distribute them across the globe. THE SENSORS ARE IN THE EARLY STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT

  • BUT THE TECHNOLOGY HAS DEMONSTRATED DETECTION CAPABILITY ON THE PARTS PER BILLION LEVEL

  • OF SENSITIVITY. SiN-VAPOR stands for Silicon Nonowire in a

  • Vertical array with a Porous Electrode. SiN-VAPOR is unique and different from other

  • technologies out there in that is a 3D architecture so we are maximizing the surface area so we

  • are maximizing our sensing capabilities within our architecture.

  • With our technology we have been able to demonstrate parts per billion and just recently we have

  • been able to demonstrate parts per trillion detection of chemical compounds. So the first

  • part in solving trace chemical detection as a problem for IED detection is getting that

  • sensitivity, being able to detect and operate in the parts per trillion to the parts per

  • billion range. This is why we are very excited about the SiN-VAPOR architecture because we

  • have been able to demonstrate that level of sensitivity.

  • The next big hurdle which is where we are at is selectivity.

  • Now, fortunately, because we are using silicon and we have that history of functionalizing

  • and changing silicon structure we can utilize that from the semiconductor industry to hopefully

  • advance that. Combine that with some of the NRL scientists

  • and the facilities that we have here at NRL, we are very excited about accomplishing and

  • very confident about getting over that last hurdle to transition this technology to the

  • warfighter and also to the consumer. WHAT DOES THE FUTURE LOOK LIKE FOR THE SiN-VAPOR

  • SENSOR? The goal of this sort of project is to have

  • a small field-deployable distributed sensor on the same form factor as the cell phone.

  • "This would be akin to the Star Trek tricorder is what we are trying for.

  • So that everybody can be able to do chemical detection with their cell phones. And then

  • we could give that to every soldier out in the field so every soldier becomes a point

  • detector out in the field and can identify IEDs and do that without being close to them.

  • This could also be able to supplement dogs and also help in airport security. So one

  • way of doing Airport Security in the future if you had a sensor that demonstrated the

  • necessary sensitivity and selectivity like the SiN-VAPOR sensor is going towards, then

  • you could distribute that throughout the entire airport and have a checkpoint free airport

  • security system where you could map in real time the chemical plumes around every individual

  • in the airport. MAKING AIR TRAVEL A RELAXED, PLEASANT EXPERIENCE

  • WITH NO LINES AT THE AIRPORT, ONE COULD ONLY HOPE

  • THERE IS A LOT OF RESEARCH YET TO DO ON THE SiN-VAPOR BEFORE THESE SENSORS ARE USED IN

  • OUR CELL PHONES TO DETECT THE ENVIRONMENT AROUND US, BUT IT IS AN EXCITING IDEA.

  • NRL SCIENCE SOLVING THE CHALLENGES OF TOMORROW

SINCE JANUARY 2011, MORE THAN 10,000 IMPROVISED EXPLOSIVE DEVICES OR IED EVENTS HAVE OCCURED

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