未爆弹药
爆炸物
聚合物
分析物
爆炸物探测
荧光
化学传感器
电子鼻
材料科学
纳米技术
遥感
化学
光学
地质学
电极
复合材料
物理
物理化学
有机化学
作者
Colin Cumming,Craig Aker,Mark Fisher,M. V. Fok,Marcus J. la Grone,Dennis K. Reust,Mark G. Rockley,Timothy M. Swager,Eric Towers,Vance E. Williams
摘要
Chemical vapors originating from the explosive charge within landmines and unexploded ordnance (UXO) form a chemical "signature" unique to these devices. The fact that canines can detect this signature was a primary motivation for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's (DARPA) Dog's Nose Program. One goal of this program was to develop electronic chemical sensors that mimic the canine's ability to detect landmines. The sensor described here, developed under this program, utilizes novel fluorescent polymers to detect landmine signature vapors in air at ultratrace concentration levels (parts-per-trillion or less). Thin films of the polymers are highly emissive but undergo a dramatic reduction in emission intensity when molecules of target analytes bind to the polymer. Binding of a single explosive molecule can quench the fluorescence from hundreds of polymer repeat units, resulting in an amplification of the quenching response. The polymer structure contains receptor sites designed to interact specifically with nitroaromatic explosives, enhancing the selectivity of the polymers for target analytes. A man-portable sensor prototype, similar in size and configuration to metal detectors currently used for mine detection, has demonstrated performance comparable to that of canines during field tests monitored by DARPA at Fort Leonard Wood, MO.
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