INEXPENSIVE CHEMICAL DEFENSE NETWORK FOR A FIXED SITE
This work was sponsored by the Department of the Air Force under Contract FA8721-05-C-0002. Opinions, interpretations, conclusions and recommendations are those of the authors and not necessarily endorsed by the United States Government.
The Inexpensive Chemical Agent Detection System (ICADS) consists of a network of affordable line-of-sight sensors, each designed to detect chemical threats passing between two points with high sensitivity and a low false-alarm rate. Each leg of the ICADS system is composed of two devices, a broadband IR transmitter, and a receiver containing a long-wave-IR spectrometer. The spectrometer continually measures the spectrum of the radiation emitted by the transmitter, which is separated from the receiver by up to several hundred meters, forming a line of protection. A chemical vapor or aerosol plume with sufficient long-wave-IR absorption causes a characteristic change in the spectrum of light collected by the receiver as the plume crosses the protected line, signaling a threat. Background measurements were conducted to determine background-limited performance. Additionally, a sensor composed of a long-wave-IR fixed-grating spectrometer and a hot-filament transmitter was designed and built. Measurements of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and resolution agree with our analytical model and meet sensor requirements.