November 8, 2012
Homeland Security tests tunnel plug at WVU
AP Photo
Engineers inspect the edges of an inflatable plug for a scale-model subway tunnel Thursday in Morgantown. ILC Dover of Delaware has been working with West Virginia University and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to develop a plug that could quickly and automatically deploy to protect subway and vehicle tunnels from flooding.
AP Photo
Senior project engineer of Delaware-based ILC Dover, Jeff Roushey, shows the two Vectran layers that create a virtually impenetrable blanket around an inflatable plug designed to protect transportation tunnels from flooding in an emergency.
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MORGANTOWN, W.Va. -- The technology may still be a few years from installation and deployment, but researchers at West Virginia University are working with a Delaware company and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to fine-tune giant inflatable plugs that could protect subway and vehicle tunnels from future flooding.

The Resilient Tunnel Plug has been years in development and testing, but it may be more relevant than ever: Superstorm Sandy sent a record 14-foot storm surge into New York Harbor, flooding subway tunnels that move some 5.2 million people a day.

There is no telling how well ILC Dover's Resilient Tunnel Plug could have helped prevent damage, "but that's the kind of thing we're designing these things for,'' Homeland Security spokesman John Verrico said Thursday as the latest testing got under way in an airplane hangar.

Packed like an air bag, the oblong balloon made of Space Age materials flopped out of the wall of a scale-model subway tunnel that WVU engineers developed several years ago, inflating in about two minutes. While contact sensors monitored the pressure, engineers with WVU, ILC and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory visually inspected the edges to see how tightly the tube filled the tunnel.

A proper fit is critical to the plug's success, said John Fortune, project manager for the Department of Homeland Security.

"If there's not a good seal, we're going to see substantial flooding,'' he said. And while there will always be some leakage, the goal is to make it minimal.

The plug is first inflated with air, then pressurized with water, which adds strength and the ability to withstand external pressures, Fortune said.

When it's fully inflated, the woven bands of the Vectran fiber blanket around it are virtually impenetrable, said ILC's senior project engineer, Jeff Roushey.

Vectran is a yarn spun from liquid crystal polymer. Its manufacturer says that pound for pound, Vectran fiber is five times stronger than steel and 10 times stronger than aluminum. For the plug, the yarn has been woven into 2-inch wide bands that Roushey says can withstand 5,000 pounds of force.

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Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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