The US military is working on body armor sensors that can detect and measure exposure to potentially harmful blasts

Advertisement
The US military is working on body armor sensors that can detect and measure exposure to potentially harmful blasts
Marines with 3rd Battalion, 11th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, fire an M777 Howitzer at known targets during training August 9, 2018, at Mount Bundey Training Area, Australia.
  • The US military is putting blast gauges in body armor to detect whether or not a US service member has been exposed to a potentially harmful blast.
  • Pentagon officials recently revealed information on the sensor program in a briefing on the traumatic brain injuries US service members suffered after an Iranian missile attack in January.
  • The system involves three blast sensors, one for the head, the chest, and a shoulder, that provide blast overpressure data, which could be used to determine if an affected service member might be in need of medical evaluation.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The US military is putting sensors in body armor to detect whether troops have been exposed to potentially harmful blasts.

Advertisement

In the wake of an Iranian missile attack on US forces in Iraq in early January, 110 US troops were diagnosed with mild traumatic brain injuries. Initial reports indicated there were no injuries, due in large part to the difficulty of detecting and diagnosing TBIs, Defense Department officials have explained.

The body armor blast sensors the military is working on could make it easier to tell if a service member needs medical evaluation by measuring blast overpressure exposure.

"It's three sensors that you can wear under your body armor that will detect whether you were exposed to a blast event," Joseph Ludovici, the principal director for military community and family policy, told reporters at the Pentagon recently.

He explained that even if a warfighter does not have any immediate symptoms, "if your tracker shows that you were exposed to a blast event, then we're going ahead and evaluating those folks to see whether they have traumatic brain injury."

Advertisement

The sensor project is a pilot program that has been going on for about 20 months, with 58 units outfitted with BlackBox Biometrics 7th generation blast gauges.

BlackBox Biometrics blast gauge

Each service member gets three gauges, one for the helmet, one for the chest, and one for the shoulder.

"What these blast gauges read is the blast overpressure wave, which is measured in pounds per square inch or PSI," Kathy Lee, the special assistant for TBI matters for the assistant secretary of defense for health affairs, told reporters Wednesday.

"So, we're getting PSI values from three different places on wearable sensors that the service member has."

Each of the blast gauges have green, yellow, and red lights. In a blast scenario, one to four PSI is green, four to sixteen is yellow, and greater than sixteen is red.

Advertisement

Green is better than red, but it doesn't mean someone is good to go.

The blast sensors give warfighters, as well as medical personnel, data to better understand what they were exposed to. To diagnose a TBI, medical professionals use the MACE II tool, which is a comprehensive evaluation tool.

As part of the ongoing testing of the blast sensors, military researchers are also looking at how the various sensor readouts match up with certain neurological and cognitive impacts associated with TBIs to get a better grasp of what the readings mean from a health and performance standpoint.

Previous analysis of traumatic blast events focused on static measurements in open fields, but the new system looks at dynamic measurements for individual service members, Lee said.

The blast sensors are currently being tested in training environments to evaluate the impact of certain weapons and munitions, but within the next 18 to 24 months, the sensors will be tested down range in operational environments. At the end of the testing, recommendations will be submitted to the department on how to proceed.

Advertisement
{{}}