|
|
Source: University of Missouri - Rolla 09/05/2002 08:29
 By Claire
Faucett
 |

 Polishing the Millennium
Arch sculpture in the waterjet lab
| Dr. Anuj Gupta,
associate professor of geological and petroleum engineering, and other
researchers at UMR’s High Pressure Waterjet Laboratory have developed a waterjet
drilling system that sprays a narrow stream of water at such force that it can
slice through steel, concrete and most other construction materials without
disturbing the rubble surrounding the hole.
Using a waterjet, rescuers
can find out what is underneath all that rubble and debris.
“A waterjet
does not work like a mechanical drill. There is no pushing or force involved,”
says Gupta. “Instead, a stream of high-pressure water mixed with an abrasive,
such as sand, cuts a hole that is truly straight, regardless of the material it
hits.”
While UMR researchers have used waterjets in the past to cut
through rock, dig through hazardous waste and wash away land mines, they hadn’t
considered waterjets as a rescue and firefighting tool until after last
September’s terrorist attacks.
“None of us here at UMR thought about
using the waterjet for this purpose until after Sept. 11,” says Gupta. “Most of
the technology has been around; we just hadn’t thought of applying it to this
until now. It forced us to think about how we can deal with something like this
in a more efficient way.”
Gupta and a team of UMR researchers found that
a waterjet can create a tunnel approximately 1 1/2 inches in diameter, go
hundreds of feet straight through the rubble to the area of interest. After this
hole is made, the waterjet can be removed and a camera can be sent in to survey
the damage and check for survivors.
For firefighting operations the
waterjet can then be placed back in the hole and used to deliver water to the
hottest part of the fire.
“They were spraying a lot of water on top of
the rubble (following the World Trade Center collapse), yet all that rubble
tends to guide the water away from the heart of the fire, much like a gutter
does. It does not necessarily go where you want to it to go,” says Gupta.
With the concentrated stream of a waterjet, however, “You are not just
throwing all that water around, but you are really pointing it at where you
really need it,” says Gupta.
Using waterjets would also be safer for
firefighters. Firefighters can be put in less danger since the waterjet machine
can be controlled remotely at some distance away from the fire or unstable
structure.
Looking back at the events that took place on and following
Sept. 11, Gupta says, “I think if this technology had been around, the fire
could have been extinguished much faster.”
Waterjets are used to make a
variety of products. For example, a waterjet cuts the carpet in most cars
because it cuts so fast, is sterile, and is less expensive than other methods.
Other uses include locating and neutralizing land mines, cutting cardboard and
making candy bars, frozen foods and aircraft components.

| |