Posted June 5th, 2007 by admin
NASA Tech Briefs INSIDER 06/05/2007
NASA Wireless Sensor System Finds New Uses as Commercial Product
Beneath the waves near Key Largo, FL, an underwater lab called Aquarius provides a safe harbor for scientists to live and work for weeks at a time. For NASA, Aquarius provides an environment that is analogous to the International Space Station (ISS) and the space shuttle. To maintain Aquarius, NASA recruited Invocon of Conroe, TX, to develop wireless sensor technology that monitors and measures environmental and structural parameters inside the lab.
The project included the design, fabrication, and demonstration of a battery- powered, miniature wireless temperature sensor. NASA and Invocon agreed to take Invocon’s existing wireless network communication system and combine it with various microelectro- mechanical system (MEMS) sensors. The innovation consisted of a PC interface unit, a graphical user interface, and multiple wireless sensors that are each equivalent in size to a stack of five quarters.
Upon completion of the miniature wireless sensor, NASA’s Johnson Space Center applied it to the space shuttle to acquire temperature data from several fundamental locations in and around the shuttle crew compartment and avionics equipment. The sensor system has flown and operated successfully on more than 20 space shuttle missions. Further use of the technology is being investigated for monitoring carbon dioxide concentrations onboard the ISS.
Invocon’s wireless sensor system has been turned into a commercial product called MicroWIS-CO2, a wireless, remote, low-power, carbon dioxide data acquisition system for near-static sensing and recording applications.
Read the full story here.
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Posted June 5th, 2007 by admin
NASA Tech Briefs INSIDER 06/05/2007
Techs of the Week: Torque and Liquid Level Sensors
The Magtorque sensor provides a simple, low-cost means to monitor torque on rotating elements. It uses a small and magnetoelastic sensor attached to the shaft that is monitored remotely via an inductive pickup. It provides sensitive and repeatable measurements of applied torque without direct physical contact.
More information here.
An optical liquid level sensor eliminates the need for encapsulation material to seal the light source, detector, and associated wire bonds within the assembly. Without thermal expansion and contraction of encapsulating material, the operating temperature range is significantly extended. The sensor uses a semiconductor light source and is suitable for extreme operating environments such as industrial, commercial, military, or aerospace.
More information here.
The Technologies of the Week describe inventions offered for license through the yet2.com marketplace. Search over $2.5 billion of licensable technologies at www.yet2.com.
Posted in Materials, Sensors, Optics, Detectors | Comments Off
Posted June 5th, 2007 by admin
NASA Tech Briefs INSIDER 06/05/2007
Cell Phone Sensors Would Detect Bio Threats and Attacks
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is researching the use of cell phones equipped with sensors that could detect biological agents such as anthrax, as well as radioactive isotopes and toxic chemicals. Since fixed sensors can’t be placed everywhere, the solution could soon be in everyone’s hands.
Gentag, a Washington, DC-based company, is working with the government on a patented technology that modifies a cell phone to serve as a low-cost radiation and/or chemical sensor to discover external threats. The technology incorporates both modular (removable) sensor modules and built-in sensors.
The DHS program, called Cell-All, would link cell phones equipped with the detection sensors via the Global Positioning System (GPS). If a detector sensed a threat, the GPS would transmit the location and time to local emergency responders and the DHS operations center. According to the DHS, if the program works, it could be a “game-changer” in how the nation detects and responds to a deadly attack.
Click here for more information.
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Posted May 24th, 2007 by admin
NASA Tech Briefs INSIDER 05/24/2007
System Detects Hazardous Materials Released in Aircraft Cabins
Researchers at Purdue University are developing a system that uses
mathematical models and sensors to locate passengers releasing hazardous materials or pathogens inside airline cabins. The research has shown that the technique can track a substance to an area the size of a single seat.
The technique, called “inverse simulation,” analyzes how a material disperses throughout the cabin and then runs the dispersion in reverse to find its origin. Sensors track the airflow pattern and collect data related to factors such as temperature, velocity, and concentration of gases and particles in the air.
According to the researchers, the technique might enable officials to identify passengers responsible for the unintentional release of germs, such as contagious viruses, or the intentional release of pathogens or chemical agents in a terrorist attack.
For more information, click here.
Posted in Materials, Sensors, Detectors, Air Transportation | Comments Off
Posted May 22nd, 2007 by admin
NASA Tech Briefs INSIDER 05/22/2007
CLEANSENS is a non-dispersive infrared gas photometer used to measure the presence and concentration of high-GWP (Global Warming Potential) gases, including HFCs, PFCs, and SF6. It uses a patented dual-beam sensor to achieve a very wide dynamic range of detection. The sensor employs an electrically pulsed thin-film emitter to provide sensitivity, stability, and operating temperature tolerance.
Further information here.
A low-cost, opto-thermal sensing system has been designed to sense toxic gases. The micromachined sensor integrates a pulsing radiation source, a multilayer interference filter, a specially etched silicon wafer to minimize infrared light, and a micromachined gas temperature sensor into one design.
Further information here.
The Technologies of the Week describe inventions offered for license through the yet2.com marketplace. Search over $2.5 billion of licensable technologies at www.yet2.com.
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