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by By Mr. Dan Lafontaine (RDECOM) Washington DC (SPX) May 14, 2012
A Soldier treks through treacherous terrain in a dangerous combat zone with a rucksack filled with meals ready-to-eat, first-aid gear, weapons, ammunition, radios and batteries. The U.S. Army Research, Development and Engineering Command is lightening the Soldier's load by developing smaller and lighter batteries. Scientists and engineers are unburdening the Soldier, increasing maneuverability, reducing fatigue, and cutting time needed for battery re-charging. Christopher Hurley, an electronics engineer with RDECOM's Communications--Electronics Research, Development and Engineering Center for six years, leads the battery development projects team. "One of the major projects on the battery team is trying to reduce the logistics burden," Hurley said. "We investigate state-of-the-art battery chemistries that will help us to decrease the Soldier load."
HALF-SIZE BA-5590 BATTERY "The Soldier can still perform the same [mission] with half the weight and volume in batteries," Hurley said. "It will lighten their load and increase their maneuverability so they have more freedom to get around on the battlefield." The research team accomplished the size and weight savings through improvements in the battery's materials, he said. One of the battery chemistries under development is lithium-carbon monoflouride. "A lot of the research is done on the materials. Once we identified a chemistry that has potential to lighten the Soldier load, a lot goes into it in terms of the raw materials - the cathode, anode, and energy-storage components that afford us a high-energy density battery," Hurley said. The Army has been working on the battery for five years, and it should be fielded to Soldiers in about a year, Hurley said.
POLYMER CONFORMAL BATTERY "We're putting those same battery chemistries into a wearable battery configuration known as the Polymer Conformal Battery," Hurley said. "The idea is to keep it close to the body so there are not a lot of projections from the body. When the Soldier is in a prone position or tight spaces, you don't have huge batteries sticking out. "The next step is to get it into an integrated, wearable vest system so that Soldiers can wear this battery to have it run to all of their equipment."
SOLDIER WEARABLE INTEGRATED POWER SYSTEM SWIPES places pouch-mounted chargers and power cables for batteries, GPS units, shot-detection systems and handheld communications into the vest. It allows for extended mission times without the need to of swap batteries or power sources by keeping devices charged at all times. SWIPES won one of the top 10 U.S. Army Greatest Inventions in 2010. "All of the cabling is routed through the different pockets for radios and equipment. The idea is to have this battery power all of the equipment," Hurley said. The Army Rapid Equipping Force and Project Manager Soldier Warrior have started field testing several hundred SWIPES units. "The major benefit is the weight savings. For a typical 72-hour mission, a Soldier will save up to 12 pounds of batteries they don't have to carry," Hurley said.
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