Chemical warfare
DARPA Seeks System To
Deal With Chemical Warfare Agents
By: Kylie Bull, Managing Editor
12/17/2014 (11:52am)
The Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is looking for a portable system that has the
ability to turn stockpiles of chemical warfare agents into dirt or other safe
organic compounds without generating hazardous waste.
Destroying chemical
warfare agents in bulk is a challenge for the military andinternational
community. Current methods of eradication, such as incineration or hydrolysis,
create toxic waste that requires further processing. The logistics required to
transport large stockpiles from storage to a disposal site can be risky and
expensive. Additionally, different types of chemicals require different methods
to make them safe, so each agent requires a specific neutralization procedure.
To address these
challenges, DARPA has announced the Agnostic Compact Demilitarization of
Chemical Agents (ACDC) program and issued a Broad Agency Announcement
solicitation.
The ACDC program aims to
develop technologies for a transportable, prototype disposal system that
converts any chemical warfare agent into safe organic compounds, such as
harmless soil, using minimal consumables in the process and creating no
hazardous waste. The system would enable safe destruction of chemical
stockpiles on site without the need for transportation.
“Chemical warfare agents
are made of deadly combinations of chemicals that in their original, basic
constituent form were at one time a harmless part of the environment,” said
Tyler McQuade, DARPA program manager. “ACDC aims to develop technologies that
reverse the process and return the chemical compounds to their safe, natural
state in the environment, without creating hazardous waste in the process.”
Looking beyond current
incineration methods that can create acid rain as a byproduct, and hydrolytic
methods that require large amounts of water, ACDC seeks new methods that would
allow indigenous materials near a chemical weapons storage site anywhere in the
world to be used as scavenger material to neutralize agents. Soil is plentiful
in many places around the world and is envisioned as a main consumable for a
new neutralization process.
“Simply put, we want a
new process that would take dirt, plant matter, or whatever is plentiful at the
storage location, mix it in with any chemical agent and get safe dirt or plant
matter out the back side that can be put back in the environment right at that
location, significantly reducing the cost of current methods,” McQuade said.
The ACDC program seeks
expertise in areas such as soil science, environmental science/engineering,
chemistry (analytical, inorganic, organic, physical), chemometrics, process
engineering and control system engineering.
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