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MILTECH
Beetle uses chemical warfare, inspires ATM protection technology
by Brooks Hays
Zurich, Switzerland (UPI) May 9, 2013


British military taps Selex ES to improve delivery of spare parts
London (UPI) May 9, 2013 - Selex ES is automating the supply of spare parts for Britain's Ministry of Defense to eliminate a lag period in delivery fulfillment.

Under the system to be implemented under a $19 million award for the ministry's Commodity Team, the need for spares will be automatically determined and delivered.

"It's a new smart approach to spares supply" said Stewart Miller, senior vice president of Support and Service Solutions at Selex ES. "Instead of waiting until parts are required and then providing them, we're using advanced computer modelling to work out what parts the MOD will need, and when they'll need them.

"It means we can pre-empt their requirements and deliver spares so that they're available as soon as they become necessary."

Working on the project will be Selex ES's procurement partner, Astute Electronics Ltd.

Selex ES said a proactive obsolescence management service is included in the agreement, which will cover 57 bases in the country.

Additional contract provisions were not disclosed.

Engineers tasked with protecting bank ATMs from thieves have drawn inspiration from an acid-spitting beetle.

The minute and colorful bombardier beetle, found throughout Central Europe, was well-versed in chemical warfare well before WWII scarred the countryside. The nimble little beetle, no more than a centimeter long, can not only spray would-be attackers with a gaseous cloud of acid, but can -- when necessary -- ignite said cloud and cause a mini explosion.

The insect has two chemical-storing chambers: one for the caustic spray and one for the catalytic enzymes that set off the explosion. The two tricks can kill ants and scare off frogs.

"When you see how elegantly nature solves problems, you realise how deadlocked the world of technology often is," said Wendelin Jan Stark, a professor at ETH Zurich, a technology institute in Switzerland.

Inspired by the beetle, Stark and his fellow researchers developed a honeycomb-like plastic structure that houses two chemicals: hydrogen peroxide and manganese dioxide. A sudden impact, such as a robber attempting to jimmy open an ATM, causes the two chemicals to mix, triggering violent chemical reaction that produces water vapour, oxygen and heat -- enough, researchers hope, to ward off criminals.

ATM and bank transport vehicles have been increasingly targeted by thieves, and technology could be one way to thwart such attempts. Many ATMs are already outfitted with various protections, but most of these are mechanized, ineffective and cost-prohibitive.

"A small motor is set in motion when triggered by a signal from a sensor," the researchers claimed in their new study. "This requires electricity, is prone to malfunctions and is expensive."

The new ATM-protecting technology is detailed in the latest issue of Journal of Materials Chemistry A.

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