Manchester,
04
May
2016
|
15:50
Europe/London

Researchers team up to test improved landmine detection technology

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An academic research team from The University of Manchester has teamed up with colleagues from King’s College London and the University of Zagreb to test innovative new landmine detection technologies simultaneously for the first time, at a state-of-the-art testing facility in Croatia.

The University of Manchester’s ‘Project SEMIS’ combines advanced metal detection with ground penetrating radar. Modern landmines are almost entirely plastic, limiting the effectiveness of metal detection, and the only metal components are typically just a few millimetres long. Mines are also common in former battlefields, where they are surrounded by buried shell casings, shrapnel, and other debris. Each tiny scrap of metal must therefore be treated as a potential mine, dramatically slowing down the clearance of mined areas.

Combining ground penetrating radar with metal detection has recently shown significantly improved clearance rates. Project SEMIS is designing a handheld device that can not only detect the presence of metal but also characterise it and, combined with ground penetrating radar, give an indication of whether or not an object is a threat.

They have been joined in Croatia by a team from King’s College London, who are developing a sensor which will detect the presence of explosive material underground by sending out bursts of radio waves, and a team from Zagreb, who are developing software algorithms and design modifications to overcome problems caused by mineral-rich soils which interfere with current detection technology.

All three research teams are funded by Find A Better Way, a charity founded by football legend Sir Bobby Charlton which supports landmine-related scientific research and mine education projects around the world.

The projects are expected to work especially well in tandem, and ultimately, the aim will be for all three technologies to be available for use in handheld devices for deminers working in the field. Although it will still be several years before these technologies are in common use, used in combination they could substantially accelerate the progress of demining in former war zones. With an estimated 110 million active landmines worldwide in 40% of the world’s countries and territories, total landmine removal is expected to take up to 1,000 years using current technology.

“I’m delighted that we are working with the team from King’s and Zagreb. Until you get out of the lab and into the field it’s impossible to understand how well a new design works, and it is great to go through this process together with what we hope will be a complementary technology. We can also learn a lot from our Croatian colleagues who have many years’ experience of having to address the scourge of landmines on their own soil. If we all succeed together, we will make demining faster, easier, and much, much safer.”
Professor Anthony Peyton, Project SEMIS leader

Find A Better Way CEO Lou McGrath OBE says, “Humanitarian demining has been underway in some countries for over twenty years now, and it can be a slow and intensive process. Mined areas must to be cleared 100% for a community to safely return and use the land again. Besides the direct harm landmines cause to the communities that live among them, it can be also dangerous for the deminers. Roughly 200 deminers have become casualties of landmines themselves in the last five years. Find A Better Way believes that developing a multi detection system will not only add to the safety of deminers but also speed up the process of clearance. The testing being done in Croatia is an important step in that process.”

 

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