BOSTON (AP) – Timothy Swager began developing bomb-sniffing technology a decade ago under a Pentagon-funded research project to help explosives disposal teams clear land mines – a battle in many of the world’s war zones in which Swager’s invention has yet to see action.
Instead, U.S. soldiers in Iraq are using Swager’s handheld device to scan people and automobiles for traces of bomb-making materials or for hidden explosives that can be detected through telltale chemical vapors.
Soldiers also are using mobile military robots fitted with Swager’s sensing equipment to find explosives in hard-to-reach and dangerous areas.
Financial obstacles, rather than technical ones, have so far prevented the invention’s use in helping pinpoint the location of old land mines, Swager says.
So he’s pleased it’s found applications in Iraq that the military credits for saving soldiers and civilians.
“Troops were getting killed, and they needed everything they could get their hands on,” Swager said in a phone interview. “That really catapulted this technology forward.
“It’s not completely perfect, but it’s really an important tool in combatting these IEDs,” or improvised explosive devices, which account for the majority of U.S. casualties in Iraq.
Swager’s work in developing explosives-sniffing technology and other inventions earned the 45-year-old chemist this year’s $500,000 Lemelson-MIT Prize, which was to be announced Monday.
Swager, head of the Department of Chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, worked with colleagues to invent synthetic material that attracts chemicals like TNT typically used in explosives. The invention is capable of detecting minute traces of explosives at chemical concentrations as low as a few parts per trillion.
In 2001, Swager licensed his patented technology to Nomadics, now a unit of ICx Technologies, for use in that company’s Fido Explosives Detector, named for its ability to simulate a bomb-sniffing dog.
“Within some classes of chemicals, it can actually smell as well as a dog,” Swager said.
The technology can be equipped on military robots produced by two Massachusetts firms, Burlington-based iRobot Corp. and Waltham-based Foster-Miller Inc.
Fido also has been tested by National Park Police who used handheld units to screen bags on the Washington D.C. Mall during last year’s Fourth of July celebration.
“I can envision down the road it could be used for airport security screening,” he said.
The 13-year-old Lemelson-MIT program also honored Lee Lynd as the winner of its new $100,000 Award for Sustainability, for work that has the potential to improve global quality of life and protect the environment.
Lynd, a professor of engineering at Dartmouth College and co-founder of Mascoma Corp., received the award for inventions that convert materials such as grass, wood, wheat and rice straw into ethanol for fuel.
Jerome H. Lemelson and his wife, Dorothy, founded the nonprofit Lemelson-MIT Program in 1994.
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Lemelson-MIT Program: http://web.mit.edu/invent
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