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Technologies for the
Troops
ORNL's National Security Directorate is solving an array of
technology challenges for the Department of
Defense.
Oak Ridge
National Laboratory is the Department of Energy's largest multipurpose
research facility. Part of the Laboratory's research agenda includes the
National Security Directorate's Department of Defense organization,
designed to make ORNL's research and technology capabilities available to
solve specific technical challenges for the Department of Defense.
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Materials researchers can detect early signs of
corrosion in aircraft frames.
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In this way, ORNL supports the
Secretary of Energy's goal to "protect our national security by applying
advanced science and nuclear technology to the nation's
defense."
The
directorate is organized to match DOD needs with ORNL capabilities in two
fundamental ways: Applying ORNL technologies to specific DOD needs, gaps,
or shortfalls, and making DOD aware of evolving ORNL capabilities that
might be of benefit to one or more military services. To accomplish these
tasks, the Laboratory's DOD organization has a unique blend of joint
military experience representing more than 400 years of military service.
This combination of military experience and technological expertise
represents a broad and unique collection of talent available to address
scientific challenges for the Department of Defense.
Getting Out of a Jam
The
opposition in Iraq is a "thinking enemy." As the American military has
become increasingly adept at developing countermeasures for the use of
improvised explosive devices (IEDs), the enemy in turn has responded with
equally creative ways to deliver the devices, says Mike Kuliasha, the
NSD's chief scientist.
"This past
year I have spent a good portion of my time on IEDs," he says. "I've put
together a consortium of five Department of Energy national labs,
including ORNL, to demonstrate to the Department of Defense how to take a
systematic approach to solving the IED problem."
A technology
that may make U.S. radios much more difficult to jam is currently under
development. The U.S. military is working with Boeing to upgrade its radio
technology to a modern Joint Tactical Radio System. The base technology of
JTRS is software-defined radio (SDR), in which software modifies
characteristics of the system's radios at specified times. For example,
software could periodically change the fundamental characteristics of the
radio waveforms, making it difficult for the signal to be jammed.
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Car destroyed by improvised explosive device in
Iraq.
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The SDR would allow all
coalition radios to talk to each other, providing much needed
interoperability.
"Our SDR
focus is different from the mainstream JTRS approach," says Mark Buckner
of ORNL's Engineering Science and Technology Division. "We have developed
a dynamic, software-reconfigurable, computing, communications, and sensing
platform. Although this platform could support military waveforms and
provide an anti-jamming capability, our primary focus has been on tagging,
tracking, and locating, as well as logistics applications."
The platform
that Buckner and his colleagues in ESTD have developed has reconfigurable
digital and analog/radiofrequency circuits. Also, they have designed
software that reprograms the circuits, enabling the device to assume a new
personality. Thus, the platform could be a global positioning system (GPS)
device, cell phone, satellite phone, or secure first-responder radio. In
the future, if insurgents in Iraq or Afghanistan attempt to jam the U.S.
communication channel, a new set of parameters to switch the radios to
different modes of communication could quickly be pushed out to radios
using this technology.
This research
is part of ORNL's Cognitive Radio Program. The program's mission is to
integrate SDR, sensors, and computational intelligence capabilities to
address both government and commercial problems in a manner that enhances
U.S. national security. A cognitive radio uses sensors to gain awareness
of its radio environment and surroundings, including the identity and
health of the user.
"We're in the
process of embedding sensors, cameras, and microphones into our cognitive
radio to increase its awareness," Buckner says. "Our long-range plan is to
program our radio to sense and sound an alarm when a soldier or first
responder wearing it approaches an area where chemical, biological, or
radiological hazards exist.
"Our current
cognitive radio platform, about the size of a tissue box, is a nexus of
reconfigurable computing platforms and sensors. Our vision is to use this
technology as the first step toward developing a cognitive sentry for
soldiers and first responders. The radio will get your attention, provide
the needed information, and assist you in performing required
actions."
In another
laboratory, ORNL researchers are developing technologies to help soldiers
navigate their way around the battlefield. Soldiers equipped with ORNL's
Triply Redundant Integrated Navigation and Asset Visibility (TRI-NAV)
system can determine their precise location regardless of foliage,
terrain, buildings, and attempts by the enemy to jam GPS signals. The key
to the proprietary system, which requires very little power for the user's
unit, is the seamless combination of a highly advanced GPS, an inertial
navigation unit, and the new ORNL-developed Theater Positioning System
(TPS). The TRI-NAV system also features precision timing to ensure that
the three systems work together to provide instant and highly accurate
location information, which is critical to soldiers in combat situations.
A novel spread-spectrum, radiofrequency scheme for the TPS signals makes
it difficult to jam TRI-NAV. Researchers expect the final soldier unit to
be about the size of a cellular telephone and accurate to less than one
meter.
Reaching Out
In 2003 Frank
Akers decided that ORNL's growing technology capabilities made it
practical to reach out beyond the Army to all the DOD services. He
appointed Richard Snead, a native of Clinton, Tennessee, and a former
commander of a squadron of six attack submarines near Hawaii, as head of
NSD's Navy programs.
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Researchers hope high-powered lasers can be
used for underwater
communication.
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Snead,
who previously managed the Program and Budget Division for the chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, hired a collaborator, John O'Neil. The two are
helping ORNL staff understand the unique culture and needs of the U.S.
Navy. At the same time, they are seeking to convince former Navy
colleagues that ORNL has capabilities beyond its nuclear expertise that
could help the Navy meet a range of technology needs. In particular, Snead
believes that ORNL's computational and communications expertise could
benefit the Navy's development of ForceNet for tomorrow's naval warfare.
Snead describes ForceNet as a way to transform information in a networked
combat force into decisive action.
Researchers
are seeking to develop coherently combined beams from large arrays of
high-powered semiconductor lasers that could be used for directed energy
sources and underwater communication in support of ForceNet. Snead is also
enthusiastic about research on metal fuels that he believes could offer a
much higher energy density than today's batteries for unmanned submersible
vessels (see Article 18 - Running On Iron).
Expanding
NSD's outreach to the Air Force and Marines is the assignment of Tim Vane,
director of NSD's Thought Leadership Programs Division. ORNL has
established research and training programs with the USAF where three
uniformed officers spend 10 months at ORNL learning about Laboratory
capabilities.
According to
Vane, ORNL has a unique combination of facilities and talent to help the
Air Force monitor the condition of a fleet that includes B-52 bombers that
date to the 1950s, as well as the most sophisticated airplanes ever built.
ORNL's materials researchers, he says, can detect early signs of corrosion
in aircraft frames that could lead to failure, especially in fighter jets
and helicopters that undergo sustained stress from numerous takeoffs and
landings in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Soldier of the Future
In 2001
ORNL's Roger McCauley persuaded Department of Defense leaders in the
Pentagon to come to Oak Ridge National Laboratory for a brainstorming
session. The topic: fielding a technologically advanced army consisting of
faster, tougher, smarter soldiers integrated into a networked,
computerized war-fighting system. Citing ORNL's Manhattan Project legacy
and the Laboratory's comprehensive research and development program,
McCauley convinced staff in the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense
for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics that ORNL could lead a process
to envision the soldier of the future, or Objective Force Warrior.
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America's "soldier of the future" will look
dramatically different.
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McCauley told his
audience that ORNL is the place to determine what will be required for the
future American soldier to outthink, outmaneuver, and outshoot the enemy
and communicate more effectively with other soldiers and military
leaders.
Frank Akers,
ORNL's Associate Laboratory Director for National Security, asked George
Fisher, director of NSD's Department of Defense Programs Division, to lead
this effort. Army leaders told Fisher they wanted to put the Objective
Force Warrior concept out for bid to private industry but needed help
building a technologically feasible vision and architecture.
"The Army had
lots of questions about the soldier of the future," Fisher says. "How is
he going to be outfitted and armed and how is he going to communicate?
What sensors will be embedded in the uniform or helmet? We get all kinds
of lists but we need someone to put the military requirements and
technology developments together to make a feasible architecture by 2012
that challenges the bounds of science."
In 2001
Fisher's team agreed to take on DOD's mission and called in nationwide
panels of experts, some of whom had no experience with the military. "We
brought to Oak Ridge the head ride designer for Disney, the chief of
surgery at Yale, the head scientist for NASA, and lots of military experts
and scientists," Fisher says. "We closed the doors and challenged the
panelists to come up with a vision of the soldier of the future. The
product we gave the Army went out as part of the solicitation to
industry."
Information Overload
ORNL's recent
work with the Department of Defense is the latest in a series of
collaborations that date to the Laboratory's inception in the 1940s. In
1999, intelligence analysts working for the U.S. military's Pacific
Command asked ORNL for assistance in a unique category of research. As a
result of time limitations, analysts charged with scanning newspapers and
summarizing articles for their commanders about potential threats were
able to read only 10% of the region's newspapers. Thomas Potok and his
colleagues solved the Pacific Command's problem.
"We created
software agents that could sort through all the region's online newspapers
in one minute and pull down the desired information," Potok says. "Then we
got our intelligent agents to work together to organize the documents
based on their similar text features and to present the similarities
visually as tree structures to the analysts. Now the analysts spend
substantially more time on analysis and much less time on gathering
information. Our challenge is to examine the roughly 10,000 documents
being published per day and help the analysts identify the 5 or 10 threat
scenarios with which they should be concerned."
Potok's
information technology, called Virtual Information Processing Agent
Research (VIPAR), has been licensed to TechConnect, an Oak Ridge business
that matches government requirements with the capabilities of the private
and public sectors.
Chemical Detection
One tactic
for slowing down an advancing military unit is to spread on the ground
chemical warfare agents, such as toxic Sarin or VX, to force the unit to
circumvent the contaminated area. The U.S. Army has long sought an
accurate detector for each of its reconnaissance vehicles to spot quickly
any contamination zones.
Responding to
the challenge, ORNL researchers have developed the Block II Chemical
Biological Mass Spectrometer (CBMS II), which the Army plans to deploy on
the Stryker and Joint Services Lightweight reconnaissance vehicles for
detecting toxic chemical contaminants on the ground. Army tests show that
CBMS II can distinguish between chemical warfare agents and diesel fuels
or oil fire fumes, meeting the Army goal of an instrument that sounds
fewer false alarms than the detectors used in the 1991 Persian Gulf
war.
Hamilton
Sundstrand, a subsidiary of the United Technologies Corporation, is
building prototype CBMS II units for testing. In 2006 the Army will
complete tests of CBMS II's ability to detect biological warfare agents
(bacteria, toxins, and viruses) and liquid toxic industrial chemicals,
such as nitric acid, that troops might encounter when approaching a bombed
factory or stockpiles of chemicals encapsulated in drums. The Army will
also test an ORNL-developed application probe that safely picks up a
chemical sample from a drum for a controlled transfer to the sampling
probe and mass spectrometer for analysis.
In DOD's
vision, future soldiers will wear a sensor that can detect a very low
level threat, such as a nerve agent or other toxic gas, and evacuate the
area in time to survive. In a project funded by the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency (DARPA), ORNL is teaming with Honeywell to
develop a microgas analyzer the size of a cell phone that combines a very
small gas chromatograph and mass spectrometer. Researchers are testing the
analyzer's ability to detect trace amounts of dimethyl methylphosphonate,
a nerve gas simulant.
Similarly,
the U.S. military services, joined by elected and public health officials,
are concerned about the possibility of municipal drinking water supplies
being poisoned by terrorists. ORNL scientists have developed a technology
that provides early warning of contamination in primary-source water
supplies. Called AquaSentinel, the device collects real-time data in the
field and transmits the data to a remote computer to provide almost
instantaneous warning of potential contamination problems, some of which
can be addressed effectively by early remediation. ORNL's AquaSentinel
monitors light emitted by healthy freshwater algae during photosynthesis
in their natural habitat. If the algae are exposed to a toxin, the nature
of the emitted light changes, providing a signature for the toxin and a
warning to security officials. The ORNL technology has been licensed to
United Defense (BAE Systems), which markets a device called
WaterSentry™.
Getting There Faster
The
Department of Defense must be able to deploy troops and equipment rapidly
anywhere in the world. Moving massive amounts of equipment and supplies
involves loading carefully weighed trucks on cargo aircraft so that the
plane is balanced and within safe weight limits.
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ORNL's portable weigh-in-motion system can
weigh military vehicles more quickly and accurately than the manual
method.
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Currently, DOD personnel
manually weigh trucks with an error rate approaching 15 percent. ORNL
researchers have developed and tested a 100-pound prototype of a portable
weigh-in-motion system that can weigh military vehicles and their cargos
automatically in less than half the time with virtually no errors.
According to NSD's Dick Davis, "The latest generation of the compact WIM
system can be carried on aircraft and used at austere landing strips such
as are often found in Afghanistan, Iraq, and other current theaters of
operation. In 2006 soldiers and Marines will field test WIM systems at
Army, Air Force, and Navy/Marine Corps sites."
As each DOD
service endeavors to improve the ability to move not only troops and
equipment but also large amounts of fuel, food, and ordinance to
operational locations around the world, military planners hope to benefit
from ORNL's Collaborative Force-Building Analysis, Sustainment,
Transportation (CFAST), a web-based, collaborative tool for such complex
logistics. CFAST, which has its roots in ORNL's JFAST, could assist
commanders in making collaborative decisions, both in deliberative
planning and during crisis actions.
A
Growing Partnership
Taken
together, an expanding collection of new technologies represents a
steadily growing partnership between ORNL and the nation's military
services. In ways that soldiers of past wars could never have imagined,
these technologies will shape the nature of future conflicts by redefining
the capabilities of the American combatant. By continuing to provide our
troops with a critical technological edge, we are contributing to the
ultimate goals of reducing casualties and securing our nation's
freedom.
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