Liquid Body Armor

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Krimson Klaw
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Liquid Body Armor

Post by Krimson Klaw »

http://www.local6.com/technology/3250297/detail.html
BALTIMORE -- Army scientists are working on a liquid body armor for clothing that stays flexible during normal use but can harden to stop a projectile when hit suddenly.

Researchers hope the liquid could be used in sleeves and pants, areas not protected by ballistic vests because they must stay flexible.

The liquid, hard particles suspended in a fluid, is soaked into layers of Kevlar, which holds it in place. Scientists recently had an archer shoot arrows at it to see how well the liquid boosted the strength of a Kevlar vest.

"Instead of the arrow going through the Kevlar, it is completely stopped by the Kevlar vest -- and sometimes just bounces right off," said Norman Wagner, a University of Delaware chemical engineering professor who is working on the project.

Vests treated with the liquid have also blocked stabs from an ice pick, and researchers are doing more tests to see if it can stop bullets or shrapnel, too.

The project, which has been under way for about three years, is a joint venture between the U.S. Army Research Laboratory and the University of Delaware's Center for Composite Materials.

Eric Wetzel, a mechanical engineer who heads the project team for the Army lab, said a "shear thickening fluid" is a key component of the liquid armor. Hard particles are suspended in the liquid, polyethylene glycol. At low strain rates, the particles flow with the fluid, enabling clothing to stay flexible. But when heavily strained, the particles become rigid.

"If it's impacted suddenly by a projectile or a knife, say, it rigidifies and somehow restricts the ability of the fabric to move," Wetzel said.

The transition happens very quickly, a millisecond or quicker.

Wetzel and Wagner are optimistic the liquid body armor will be useful to local police and prison guards -- and perhaps it could one day protect people in automobile and airplane crashes.
As cool as the goat milk that makes spider silk:

http://abcnews.go.com/sections/scitech/ ... 20118.html

Excellent reads.
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Siji
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Post by Siji »

Sometimes technology is really friggin' cool.

My first question would be whether it reacts fast enough to stop a bullet. The speed that a knife makes an impact and the speed that a bullet does, are vastly different.
Voronwë
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Post by Voronwë »

does a bullet move 2mm in 1ms?

http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.c ... v%20AK-103

Kalashnikov round travels at 900 m/s as it leaves the muzzle.

so you'd have to have have fabric that is about 3 feet thick for it to harden fast enough (assuming it hardens to even begin resisting the bullet.

i'm sure they've thought this out, and i'm sure the nubmers in the news piece are bullshit.

but anyway, its a cool concept!
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Post by MooZilla »

Siji wrote:Sometimes technology is really friggin' cool.

My first question would be whether it reacts fast enough to stop a bullet. The speed that a knife makes an impact and the speed that a bullet does, are vastly different.
Yes, that's why they are doing tests.
i am a liberal.
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