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Polymer Swab Detects Explosive Residue

Summary
Purdue University researchers have developed a new device, Nanobrush, a highly pliant, deformable material that is thermally stable from 200 to 250 degrees Celsius and is inexpensive to produce. It does not leave a residue on surfaces it contacts, and it can dislodge and capture explosive residue from cavities that may be as small as 10 microns wide by 10 microns deep. The functionality of the Nanobrush can be improved by attaching functional groups to the tips of the fibers. This technology will substantially improve the ability to detect trace amounts of explosive materials, biological warfare agents, and other substances of interest to the Department of Homeland Security.
Technology Benefits
Dislodges particles from extremely small cavitiesImproves ability to detect trace amounts of substances
Technology Application
AirportsSecurity screeningExplosive material detection
Detailed Technology Description
Stephen BeaudoinPurdue Chemical Engineering
Countries
United States
Application No.
N/A
*Abstract
None
*Background
When inspecting cargo and passengers at airports, security screeners typically employ swab-based methods to capture residual explosive materials that may remain on luggage or clothing handled by anyone that makes bombs. The number of daily screening operations worldwide is more than 10,000. There has been relatively little refinement to the design and fabrication of swabs, nor optimization for interrogating the surfaces of the sampled objects. Current materials include muslin fabric swabs, Teflon-coated fiberglass swabs, paper swabs, and Nomex swabs. These are used primarily for historical reasons, with few attempts to improve their performance at interrogating the surfaces of interest.
*IP Issue Date
None
*IP Type
Provisional
*Stage of Development
Concept developed
*Web Links
Purdue Office of Technology CommercializationPurdue Innovation and EntrepreneurshipStephen BeaudoinPurdue Chemical Engineering
Country/Region
USA

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