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Blast-Proof Fabric Resists Multiple Explosions

An anonymous reader tips a Gizmodo story on a fabric whose properties are counterintuitive, to say the least of it. "Zetix is a fabric so strong it will resist multiple car bomb blasts without breaking. It absorbs and disperses the energy from explosions... it can be used in body armor, window covering, military tents, and hurricane defenses... [and] it can be used as medical sutures that won't damage body tissue. All of this is thanks to a property that apparently defies the laws of physics: helical-auxetics, objects that actually get fatter the more you stretch them. The concept makes my head want to explode, but when you see it in action it actually makes sense."

18 of 250 comments (clear)

  1. Mind the label by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Funny

    and] it can be used as medical sutures that won't damage body tissue.

    Sutures necessary from the failure of the cloth?

    Read the label "Resists, not Proof!"
    "D'oh!"
    "At least we can use the remainder of your suit to stitch you up!"

    The concept makes my head want to explode, but when you see it in action it actually makes sense.

    You should wear a hat made of this material, if not for you, than for those around you.

    "I wear fashions from Yves St. Rongbad, in case anything around me asplode!"

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Mind the label by crakbone · · Score: 4, Funny

      Now how do we get clothes and backpacks made out of this stuff to suicide bombers?

  2. Fat pants by FalconZero · · Score: 4, Funny

    According the material on the companies web site (auxetix) one of the applications is for a fabric that changes colour as it's stretched (specifically for cargo webbing). But one application which would be much cooler (and useful for a fair portion of the slashdot crowd) is pants made out of this stuff - They'd change colour to tell you when you've eaten too many pies.

    --
    Windows in 6 Bytes (IA-32) : 90 90 90 90 CD 19
    1. Re:Fat pants by Minwee · · Score: 4, Funny

      Or next year's MacBooks.

      Think about who you're talking to.

  3. I'm confused. by Gigiya · · Score: 5, Funny
    From TFA:

    The fabrics can ... be deployed in containment systems, military tents, ballistic mosquito nets and body armor, a $2 billionpret-a-porter market.
    What?
  4. They decided to name it Zetix since by Provocateur · · Score: 4, Funny

    'iddqd' was unpronounceable and make it less marketable except to some Eastern Bloc countries

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  5. Re:Is there an SI-unit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Corleones?

  6. Re:Is there an SI-unit? by athakur999 · · Score: 4, Funny

    It is based on the amount of reward you are promised in the afterlife for using the car bomb. A "standard" car blast has a strength of 7 dekavirgins.

    --
    "People that quote themselves in their signatures bother me" - athakur999
  7. I claim prior art by spun · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is hardly new. I've had a something that gets fatter the more you stretch it for as long as I can remember.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  8. Garbage by spleen_blender · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "All of this is thanks to a property that apparently defies the laws of physics"

    These kind of statements are so frustrating to me...

  9. Re:Energy dissipation by ecklesweb · · Score: 4, Informative

    Oh yeah, video of the dragon skin grenade test here

  10. Video of Auxetic material by jupitersspot · · Score: 5, Informative

    Nice video showing and explaining the phenomenon: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdkYuLsT7Sc

  11. Re:Energy dissipation by gurps_npc · · Score: 5, Informative
    Some people here simply do not understand how armor works. So they think "this thing won't protect you, because it doesn't stop the energy/pressure, it just doesn't break".

    Armor is not just a single layer of stuff, it is multiple layers. Yes, this stuff by itself is not worth much as armor, but layer it on top of other thigns, and you got something special.

    Each layer stops something else. This layer does not break, so it stops penetration. Make a cell structure of this, fill it with something else, like say SAND, and that pressure wave you were so worried about becomes contained. Two layers of a cell structure like this, with sand in between them, and the entire explosive kinetic energy is contained, converted to heat, deflect out, or otherwise dealt with.

    --
    excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
  12. Looking forward to civilian applications of this.. by ndykman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'd be thrilled to have a motorcycle jacket and armour made better by this stuff.

  13. Re:Is there an SI-unit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    More revisionist metric nonsense.

    The "standard" car blast is called the akar. One akar is equal to six fekar, and one fekar is equal to twelve virgins. These are long standing traditional measures which are much more natural when planning real attacks, by the way... some of us actually do stuff instead of just talking about it. By all rights, even when using your annoying metric system, a "standard" car blast would be 7.2 of your dekavirgins. However the Car Bomb Unit Naming Institute is overrun by weak-willed idiots who have never blown themselves up to smite their enemy in their lives, and have chosen to spit on the face of this holy tradition by rounding the number to a more "convenient" value. As if any of these guys has ever worn an explosive belt or carried a dead-man's switch. It makes me sick, I tell you.

  14. "Defies the laws of physics" by cephyn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I really hate that saying. It makes it sound like physics is a religion, where scientists have decided "that's how things work, and that's that" - which is ridiculous. If something "defies" physics, then the laws of physics change to accommodate reality. That's how science works - it comes about based on observation.

    Nothing can defy the laws of physics - because physics describes how things work.

    --
    Moo.
  15. you just proved your own stupidity by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    a few things your intellect hasn't realized yet:

    1. menace comes from smart and ill-intentioned people as well as just dumb people
    2. that tools of war are used by men engaging the defense from those with bad intentions just as much as it is used by those with bad intentions

    thought experiment for you: a lunatic comes into town with a samurai sword and starts slashing people. reference recent news from omaha nnebraska if you think this scenario is not a constant danger throughout human existence

    1. in society #1, the people calmly stand there, explaining to him, much in your line of thought, of the stupidity of what he is doing. shortly before their jugulars are slashed. the whole town is wiped out. also wiped out with them, is the philosophy of nonviolence

    2. in society #2, as soon as the guy raises his sword, a common townsfolk raises his sword, and the only blood spilled is that of the lunatic. the philosophy of prudent use of arms survives

    interestingly enough, the philosophy of nonviolence results in more bloodletting and death (scenario #1). paradoxical, but true

    darwinistically speaking, nonviolence is a path to extinction. it sounds really nice, but in the reality of human nature and how human nature plays out, you must, UNFORTUNATELY (see, no warmongering here) have constant use of arms close by, to guard from those with bad intent. you will never stop the creation of people with bad intent in this world. if you respect free will, you respect that every once in awhile, someone somewhere will make a horrible choice, and you must guard against that. i suppose you could disallow free will. that's a certain path to nonviolence: a superfascist state. is that superior in your mind than a free but armed society?

    peace in this world is not maintained by an absence of armament, peace in this world is maintained by a balance of armament, a constant tension, a potential that is released to restore the balance of peace when an imbalance in fair action occurs by bad intentioned individuals in public settings

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  16. Re:Energy dissipation by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 4, Interesting

    OK, now imagine it stretched over titanium-frame or carbon-nanotube-frame body armor. The trick is to create some tension on the material and some distance between it and the body. You need a frame that can take the stresses of the material and the impacts, and combine that with the stopping power of the material.

    Personally though, I'd rather see something like this used in car parts (bumpers, convertible roofs, tires, etc).