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Tel Aviv University (TAU) researchers say they've come up with a pinhead-sized detector that may have been able to thwart the recent spate of mail bombs sent to diplomatic and Jewish addresses in at least three continents, and may potentially revolutionize future airport security.
He said their prototype nanotechnology-based sensor can accurately spot and identify an alphabet soup of explosives, including PETN (the plastic explosive used in the FedEx bombing plot against Chicago synagogues last weekend), TNT, RDX, TATP, C4 and HMDX. It is also slated to be able to detect biological toxins such as anthrax, cholera or botulism.
"The lab results have shown unbeatable detection capabilities, not even by a dog," Patolsky said.
Patolsky's team first coated microscopic silicon wires with a compound that binds to explosives. From there they used the wires to build a sensitive nano-sized transistor-on-a-chip containing 200 individual sensors, which Patolsky claimed enable quick and reliable detection of explosives or other suspect agents. And the sensor can work at a distance, Patolsky said, eliminating the need to bring it into contact with the item or person being checked.
Once out of the lab, the sensor will have to undergo rigorous field testing at airports and other high-security venues, he said, estimating the technology will be ready for marketing within a year or two.
Fernando Patolsky of TAU's Sackler School of Chemistry and his team set out earlier this year to challenge the drawbacks of existing explosive material detection methods: costly, cumbersome and lengthy laboratory analysis.
An Air Force Office of Scientific Research-funded team has created an inexpensive sensor the size of a penny that detects bombs made with improvised peroxide explosive devices.
The University of California at San Diego research team includes Dr. William Trogler, one of the inventors of the electronic device, and Drs. Andrew Kummel and Ivan Schuller. Together, they created the small sensors using ultra thin films. The sensors are made of cobalt and copper and have a fast response time and sensitivity that enables them to detect even minute amounts of peroxide vapors. When peroxide is present, the film made of cobalt shows a reduction in current while the copper films show an increase.
He noted that low power micro and nanosensors are ideally suited for small unmanned air vehicles, or UAV, platforms. UAVs and micro UAVs can use the technology in remote sensing for protecting facilities from chemical warfare agents when investigating chemical properties of a vapor cloud.
Previous devices created for similar detection purposes were large and expensive. The current sensor cost less than a dollar per device. The university has applied for a patent on the ultrathin sensor, but its licensing has not been finalized. In the meantime, it has attracted the interest of potential licensing partners who favor its size, cost and additional potential use in commercial applications.