April 29, 2004
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.
But like most innovation, the military application is only the beginning.
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.
Posted by: Ted at
04:54 PM | category: SciTech
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Posted by: Punch Buggy at April 29, 2004 11:00 PM (aPgOT)
Posted by: Ted at April 30, 2004 05:21 AM (ZjSa7)
Posted by: chris hall at April 30, 2004 09:32 AM (zH1Gw)
Posted by: Phelps at April 30, 2004 02:48 PM (HlHi7)
I wonder how this will work to protect joints. If the materials becomes stiffens when it becomes rigid, then snapping someone's arm or leg straight in a milisecond might be a really good way to snap aforementioned joint.
There might be a way to counterbalance the stiffness by using electrorehological fluids (ones that change viscocity when a current is passed through them). Basically as the material stiffens, one could up the voltage to increase viscocity and then slow down the stiffening response without affecting rigidity.
Beats me.
Posted by: Bravo Romeo Delta at April 30, 2004 06:38 PM (9X/fX)
Posted by: John Mayner at July 09, 2004 04:11 PM (emgn4)
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