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Rutgers to develop military armour to save soldiers’ lives

Issue No. 12 | June 16-30, 2012

Rutgers’ longstanding expertise in ceramic engineering is being tapped by the military to develop armour that better shields soldiers from modernday battlefield threats — most notably from IEDs (improvised explosive devices).

The Department of Materials Science and Engineering is part of a Johns Hopkins University-led research consortium that the US Army agreed to fund with up to $90 million for as many as 10 years. Rutgers is one of the consortium’s five core universities that will work with the US Army Research Laboratory to develop new lightweight materials for body and vehicle protection. Consortium members, in turn, will engage other universities, national laboratories and corporations in its work.

Richard Haber, professor of materials science and engineering, oversees the Rutgers component that is slated to receive up to $9 million. He says the effort will bring a more scientific approach to armour development than has been done in the past. This involves examining potential materials down to the atomic level and modelling their performance with computers.

“When you look at all the pieces of armour a soldier wears, before you know it a soldier is carrying 60 to 80 pounds of armour,” said Haber. The Army would like to cut that weight, but “the bad guys are constantly coming up with new and innovative ways to kill a warfighter.”

Armour behaves differently under different threats, he added, and armour that protected Vietnam-era soldiers from a bullet might not adequately shield Middle Eastern soldiers from a shower of nails packed in a roadside bomb.

The consortium is going to explore a range of materials that show promise for being lightweight and tough, including metals, plastics and ceramics. Rutgers will focus on ceramics, applying managerial and technical expertise gained during the past decade through the school’s Ceramic, Composite and Optical Materials Center (CCOMC). The centre, originally funded by the National Science Foundation, cultivated industrial partnerships that brought in further funding as well as expertise on translating research into manufacturing technology. Haber, the centre’s director, says the Army-funded effort will benefit from these same relationships with their private funding opportunities.

Armour’s function is to shield personnel and vehicles from the fast, high-pressure impacts of bullets, shrapnel and other projectiles. To do that, armour material has to bend, stretch or compress when struck to absorb the projectile’s energy. But it can’t break or shatter. With today’s threats, it also has to withstand repeated hits. Some materials can absorb one impact, and then having been weakened, may fail on subsequent hits.