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VOA常速英语:New Material May Reduce Concussion Effects

2016-02-04来源:VOA

As the 2016 National Football League season reaches its summit at the Super Bowl this coming Sunday (2/7), scientists are trying to learn how to more effectively protect football players from dangerous and damaging concussions.

Researchers at Cardiff and Cambridge Universities say their origami-based material may solve the problem.  
 
Powerful impacts and falls are an inevitable part of American football, the most popular sport in the United States.
 
In 2010, the National Football League acknowledged that despite protective helmets players often suffer dangerous concussions, leading to a life-long brain injury called "chronic traumatic encephalopathy."

New Material May Reduce Concussion Effects
 
Scientists at Cardiff and Cambridge universities say with the help of a supercomputer, they produced a multi-layered material that dissipates the energy of impact much better than currently used polymer foams.
 
“It is a series of folds based on origami.  So if you were to stack a series of playing cards at home, perhaps then you would come up with a configuration that might not look too dissimilar to this," said Peter Theobald of Cardiff University.
 
Testing geometrically complex shapes, researchers found that by changing the orientation of cell walls they could activate the ability of the material, they named C3, to absorb impacts from various angles.
 
Samples printed in a 3-D printer were tested for impacts and the results were again compared with computer models.  Scientists say by combining 3-D printing with the standard manufacturing process of injection molding, the new material can be produced in specific shapes.
 
“I think with this kind of material we can more than improve the performance of the helmet ... we can design a specific helmet, for example, for each head in the world," said Rafael Santiago of University of Sao Paulo.
 
Researchers say if the same design could also be printed in 3-D metal printers, it could be help protect military vehicles from various explosive devices.