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cid
05-26-2005, 10:40 AM
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http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/03_30/b3843083.htm

SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

Super Soldiers

New materials and technologies could
boost the mobility and safety of U.S. troops

The U.S. Army wants to turn G.I. Joes and Janes into superheroes right out
of Hollywood. In the 1987 film Predator, Arnold Schwarzenegger played an
Army commando battling an alien in a suit that rendered it invisible. The
film got mixed reviews, but the Army hopes its so-called Future Warrior
outfit will be a smash on the battlefield. "With a uniform like Predator's,
our soldiers would really have a lopsided advantage," says Jean-Louis
"Dutch" De Gay, a systems engineer at the Army's Soldier Systems Center in
Natick, Mass.

Advertisement


The black battle garb planned for the late 2010s looks scary enough when you
can see it, but invisible soldiers would be a lot scarier. No joke.
Scientists at DuPont (DD ) Co. are already hunting for ways to manipulate
light so soldiers could appear to disappear. And if that doesn't pan out,
EIC Laboratories Inc. in Norwood, Mass., is working on "electrochromic
camouflage" -- a chameleon fabric that would change colors instantly to
blend in with its surroundings.
Research on such concealment methods is classified. However, at the new
Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, scientists are free to talk about the combat gear they're
designing. And soldiers aren't the only ones they aim to help. Their work
also could help protect firefighters, police officers, and other emergency
responders -- with self-administering tourniquets, lightweight body armor,
and artificial muscles. MIT President Charles M. Vest didn't want to "get
tangled up in classified research," so he insisted that all developments
spawned on campus be available to industry as well as the military.
The MIT center, which opened in late May, was launched with a $50 million,
five-year grant from the Army. The budget was doubled by matching funds from
MIT and a dozen industrial partners, including Raytheon, Dow Corning, and
DuPont. The companies signed up to tap MIT's expertise in nanotechnology --
creating new materials and devices molecule by molecule, instead of
fabricating them from bulk materials. Materials engineered with such
ingredients as carbon nanotubes can have properties that are otherwise
impossible to achieve. As a result, says De Gay, "science fiction is rapidly
becoming reality -- and that could change forever the way wars are fought."
One concept for "smart" body armor would weave thin pads or even cloth from
fibers that can sense the impact of a bullet or shrapnel and automatically
stiffen, becoming even more impenetrable than the cumbersome ceramic-plate
armor troops wear now. Another major goal is cloth that eliminates the need
for ungainly biochemical-warfare suits. Instead, regular uniform fabric may
sport nano-size umbrellas that open to seal the cloth's pores, making it
impervious to airborn chemicals and pathogens.
In both cases, a key objective is to take a load off soldiers' backs. Today,
they lug 60 pounds or more into battle, depending upon which weapon they
carry, and the so-called marching load is almost twice as heavy. In five
years, the Army wants to trim the combat load to 40 pounds, and then to 15
pounds with the Future Warrior outfit. MIT's Vest predicts that armored
vests, which weigh 28 pounds now, will end up "at around eight pounds, maybe
even five."
Artificial muscles that could enable soldiers to leap tall walls, if not
buildings, are in the works, too. One candidate is made from polypyrrole. It
flexes when jolted by electricity, then relaxes when the juice is turned
off. So far, though, its reactions are much too slow.
Even with the best armor, wounds are inevitable. So when a soldier is hit in
an arm or leg, special fibers in the uniform would constrict into a
tourniquet. This will be a real life-saver, because half of all battlefeild
deaths are due to massive blood loss before wounded soldiers can be treated.
In addition, sensors would provide the soldier's vital signs and location to
medics via radio. Until the Future Warrior garment is ready, soldiers will
wear an adhesive chest patch fitted with sensors and a tiny radio. It's
being developed by MIT partner CIMIT (Center for Integration of Medicine &
Innovative Technology) in Cambridge, Mass.
To satisfy its industrial partners and avoid chewing up money needlessly,
the new institute will be "run on a business model, with regular milestone
reviews," says Edwin L. "Ned" Thomas, the MIT materials-science professor
tapped as its head. It will have a staff of 40 MIT scientists from eight
departments, plus 100-odd graduate students and visiting researchers from
the Army and industry.
Thomas admits that some wish-list items may never materialize. But that's
okay -- the idea is to infuse army research with new thinking. So the
Pentagon plans to announce, starting in August, more research centers at
other universities, focused on such areas as biotechnology and detecting
landmines. In the same spirit, to supplement its $1.2 billion research
effort, the Army will funnel $25 million to small, innovative companies that
probably never dreamed of getting a Pentagon contract. The fund's top
priority? Finding better ways to generate and store power for the Army's
high-tech gadgets. It's easy to see why: A brigade of 1,500 troops goes
through 120 tons of batteries a year. And that's before they hit their
invisibility buttons.

By Otis Port in Cambridge, Mass.

Seraph Zero
05-31-2005, 09:29 AM
Invisible armor? Gyah, that sounds like a nightmare. Seriously, I think the crime rate would triple is such technology were avaliable. I wouldn't risk the social repercussions of such a technological development. If I were in such a position, given invisible armor, there would be no end to the things I would do. Theft, murder, vandalism... all within reach, and all easy to get away with, provided such tech was in my hands. Absolute power trip, indeed...

Dark Luther
05-31-2005, 03:05 PM
I doubt it would have a strong an impact on the social crime structure.

Any such suit would be extremly expensive, and it's applicability in an urban enviroment would be limited.

It would have as much an impact as heavy assault small arms or bullet proof vests. They are present in the underworld and have cases of being used - but only rarely, and serve enforcement groups better.

Simply too expensive to be used - except perhaps by the occasional expert, but even that is not as much something to hold back progress - another country will just end up developing it.