Coming soon: forget that change of
clothes .
If there’s one thing James Bond didn’t
have, it was decent amphibious — wet
and dry — clothing. Just think of all the
times he clambered out of water clad in
dive gear, only for the bad guys to get a head start while he struggled to
get into dry clothes.
Now the US Army’s Soldier and Biological Chemical Command Lab
in Natick, Mass., has come up with an answer: a dry suit you can wear
comfortably out of the water. The amphibious suit is designed so US
Navy SEALs can get out of the water ready for action in lightweight garb.
In the water, the dry suit performs like any other, keeping the wearer
warm by preventing water from reaching the skin. But once out of the
water, the structure of its novel three-layer membrane changes to let perspiration
escape, so the wearer doesn’t become overheated and have to
change into dry clothes.
Navy SEALs are now testing the suit for general comfort and warmth
in a range of water temperatures and pressures. It will be at least a couple
of years before the suit is ready for use, says Quoc Truong, program manager
at the Natick lab, but after that it won’t be long before it finds its way
into civilian life.
“Compared to a dry suit, it will be a bit heavier because we wanted to
use a durable fabric,” says Truong. “But it’s still very light.” And SEALs
won’t have to lug around an extra set of dry clothes.
So how does it work? The suit consists of a polyurethane-based shapem
emory polymer layer, sandwiched between a laminated low-drag
stretchable outer fabric and a heat reflective insulation layer on the
inside. The transition temperature of the polymer membrane is predetermined;
between 55-65 degrees F it has a dense molecular structure
that stops water molecules from passing through it. When the temperature
rises to between 65 and 80 degrees F, the material softens and
becomes more amorphous, so sweat molecules can pass through it.
The suit is also impervious to urine, says Truong. On land, wearers can
relieve themselves by way of a zipped opening that reaches from the
shoulder to the groin, but in the water, SEALs would have no alternative
but to pee in their suit. Truong is confident that the acid in urine will not
rot the new suit’s material and hamper the diver’s activities.
New Scientist, March 31, 2001.