1 / 16

The Engineer’s Response to Terrorism

The Engineer’s Response to Terrorism. New Questions and Responsibilities. Joseph Auchter Matt Ventura Sladana Lazic Anita Lazic Michelle Hood Daniel Miller. Terrorism: A Rising Threat. September 11, 2001 Worldwide revision of engineering priorities

Télécharger la présentation

The Engineer’s Response to Terrorism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Engineer’s Response to Terrorism New Questions and Responsibilities Joseph Auchter Matt Ventura Sladana Lazic Anita Lazic Michelle Hood Daniel Miller

  2. Terrorism: A Rising Threat • September 11, 2001 • Worldwide revision of engineering priorities • Terrorism and sabotage enter the equation

  3. Engineering’s New Concerns • Traditional concerns: • Mechanical failure • Human error • Malfunction • Natural occurrences • Weather, natural disasters • New issues: • Terrorist acts • Deliberate sabotage

  4. New Tools and Methods • Risk assessment • Help with allocation of limited resources • Work closely with security agencies • Courses teach how to evaluate terrorist threat • Information • Increased dialogue • More careful dissemination • New standards and building codes

  5. Nuclear Power • What if aircraft crashes into a nuclear containment structure? • Aircraft engine tests have been conducted by Sandia National Laboratories • Jet aircraft unlikely to penetrate containment structures at 550 to 600 mph • Nuclear power plants have four security layers

  6. Nuclear Power • What about transportation casks security? • full-scale drop from nine meters onto a target • thermal test in which the cask was engulfed in a 1,475°F fire for 30 min • full-scale rail test in which the cask was smashed into a concrete block at 81 mph

  7. Structures • World Trade Center • What went wrong • 2/3 of support columns shattered • Debris penetrated each building’s core • Steel loses strength above 1000 degrees Fahrenheit • Vulnerabilities • Floor trusses were flimsy • Frame system connections were weak • Designed to precise specifications • Structural redundancy • The Pentagon • Survived better than expected • Features in original design • Made of cast-in-place reinforced concrete • Floors made of slab system • Supported on spiral-steel-reinforced columns • Limited “progressive collapse”

  8. Structures • What can be learned • Resistance to progressive collapse is critical • Fire protection systems need to be in place • Sabotage • Adequate thresholds • Multiple ignitions • Can buildings be designed to withstand such attacks

  9. Engineers against Terrorism in Aviation • Smart materials that can mend a bullet hole by self-healing • Materials that are “harder to breach, harder to damage, and less susceptible to fire” • Use of improved fuels that are less volatile.

  10. Engineers against Terrorism in Aviation • “Bullet-and-bomb-proofed door” between pilot and cabin • “Protective bubble” around national assets • “Automatic ground collision avoidance system” • New method of Instrument flying called RNP (Required Navigation Performance)

  11. A Map of Power Plants • The United States has five types of power plants • Gas • Coal • Oil • Hydroelectric • Nuclear

  12. How Power Gets Around

  13. Water System • Under protected • Controlled by Computer Systems • Flaws are Public Information

  14. The Role of Engineering in Preventing Chemical and Biological Terrorism • Chemical and Genetic Engineering • Implement new and improved detection mechanisms • Develop Faster Decontamination Methods • Develop New Vaccines and Anti-Viruses • Expand Research on genetic mutations and gene manipulation • Materials Engineering • Develop and Improve chemical and biological repellent material • Improve Chemical/Biological Agent Shields, Mask, and Air Filtering Capabilities.

  15. The Role of Engineering in Preventing Chemical and Biological Terrorism • Mechanical Engineering • Develop faster and more effective anti-biological/chemical weapon deployment systems and mechanisms. • Develop safer storage protection capabilities • Civil Engineering • Improve and Expand structures that shield chemical and biological attacks

  16. Conclusion • Questions raised by terrorism: • How do we measure the threat potential? • Who decides the “acceptable risk”? • How many safety measures are enough? • How do we deal with the unpredictable nature of terrorist acts? • Engineers have new responsibilities

More Related