Title: Advanced Fire Fighter Suit Program at NC State
1Advanced Fire Fighter Suit Programat NC State
Dr. Roger Barker
Technologies for Critical Incident Preparedness
Conference San Francisco, CA November 7, 2007
2Presentation
- The Project
- The Project Team
- The Development Process
- Garment Design
- Science and Testing
- Project Outcome
3(No Transcript)
4Unusual Challenges Opportunities
- Combination of Government, University, Industry,
and End-Users. - Emerging science and changing standards.
- Adding protection while meeting existing flame
thermal standards. - Wide range of chemical threats.
- Breathable barrier requirement.
- Extraordinary durability requirements.
- Designing the application while materials are
still in development. - Getting feedback from end-users prior to getting
everything right. - No "tradeoffs" mentality.
5Project Goal
6Project Keys
- Demonstrate clear understanding of fire fighter
first responder needs. - Assemble world class research team.
- Deliver research product valued by fire fighter
community.
7Project Team
Globe Design Team
Fire Fighters
8Integrated Technologies
- A systems engineering approach
- Incorporating advanced composite layers developed
by this project. - Input gathered from fire fighters
- Particular attention paid to garment seams, seals
and interfaces.
9Materials
10Technologies - Thermal Liner
Next-generation non-woven thermal liner with
reduced weight and bulk.
NCSU Nonwoven Cooperative Research Centers
(NCRC) new state-of-the-art pilot facility.
Advanced fibers, the highest performing materials
in the industry, blended to optimize performance.
11Technology Advances
- Garment Design
- Improved ergonomics
- Improved functionality
- Improved performance
12Voice of the Customer
13Key Garment Requirements
- Must be everyday turnout gear first and
foremost. - Must be designed for escape and rescue of viable
victims. - Must have all equipment required for protection
to be included on the garment at all times. - Must be reliably donned without the use of a
buddy. - Must not increase the level of fire fighter heat
stress. - Must meet all the performance requirements of
NFPA 1971 and CBRN option.
14Solution Deployable Protection
15Double Jacket System
16Zip-Away Collar
17Inner Jacket Hood - Mask Interface
18Glove To Jacket Interface
19FITLACE System
20SCBA to Pant Interface
21Gusseted Storm Fly / Waist Belt
22BOOTCOLLAR Interface to Pant Cuffs
23Fire Fighter Feedback Department Presentations
- Broward County, FL
- Buffalo, NY
- Clark County, NV
- Fairfax County, VA
- Honolulu, HI
- Houston, TX
- Las Vegas, NV
- Los Angeles, CA
- Miami, FL
- Minneapolis, MN
- Montgomery County, MD
- New York, NY
- Region 13, PA
- Phoenix, AZ
- Pittsburgh, PA
- Portland, OR
- Raleigh, NC
- San Antonio, TX
24Fire Fighter Feedback - Surveys
- Questionnaire at conferences 85 positive
- Questionnaire for test subjects 83 positive
Best and most frequent response at trade
shows This looks like our current gear!
25Materials to full system testing evaluation
NC State University Textile Protection Comfort
Center
26Results of Performance Tests on Prototypes
- Thermal Protection
- Chemical Protection
- Heat Stress (THL)
27Thermal Protection
Passes NFPA 1971 requirements TPP, Flame
resistance, and heat resistance tests.
28NCSU PyroMan Garment Testing
A 8.0 body burn
B 6.0 body burn
29Chemical Testing Results
- Liquid chemical penetration
- Passes NFPA 1971 Requirements
- Battery Acid, AFFF, Chlorine, Hydrological fluid,
Gasoline surrogate - Viral penetration
- Passes NFPA 1971 Requirements
- ?174 viral simulate
- CBRN Chemical permeation
- TIC permeation test capability still under
development - Membrane development ongoing to meet all
permeation requirements
30MIST Test
- Evaluates all aspects of ensemble performance
an individual wears the protective ensemble in an
agent simulant environment. - Test conditions mimic conditions of use,
including effect of different individuals on
protective performance. - Simulant/ agent correlations are performed in
laboratory
31MIST Test Results
- Obtain a Protection Factor at every body location
PF MeSoutside / MeSinside
32MIST Test Performance Summary
- Local PAD Performance (Mustard simulation)
- Passed NFPA 1971 Requirement
- PPDF gt 360
- 26 X Better than Control
-
- Systemic Performance (Nerve Agent simulation)
- Passed NFPA 1971 Requirement
- PPDF gt362 for entire body
- 30 X Better than Control
33Comfort Assessment
- NFPA 1971 guarded hot plate THL requirement
- gt205 W/m2
34Comfort Assessment
Provides more realistic THL numbers - Compared to
the flat sweating hot plate
35Physiological Wear Tests
36- Tasks derived from ASTM F 1154-99 "Standard
Practices for Qualitatively Evaluating the
Comfort, Fit, Function, and Integrity Chemical
Protective Suit Ensembles." - Conducted twice to learn and as a timed event.
- Average rating on performance of exercises
tasks showed no significant difference between
control and prototype.
Ladder Climb
Dummy Drag
Box Lifts
37Field Evaluations FDNY Fairfax County
FD Philadelphia FD
38Comments
- No problem with coat or pants.
- Mobility is fine.
- Light, plenty of room.
- Very comfortable.
- Turnout gear is comfortable, flexible, and very
mobile.
39Summary
- Demonstrated CB Turnout Prototype
- Structural fire fighter garment
- Significantly enhanced performance against toxic
TICs TIMs and chemical agents - Based on MIST results vs. control
- THL and ergonomics comparable to current turnout
systems designed for everyday use
40What this project is about Protecting Fire
Fighters/ Responders
41Successful Collaboration Between
Government
Academia
Industry