
Emergency Response Breathing Apparatus
SCAMP® (Supercritical Air Mobility Pack) is
a self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) that was originally
developed under a NASA Kennedy Space Center Small Business
Innovation Research (SBIR) contract. The use of supercritical
cryogenic air in SCAMP came from the technology developed for
the life support fuel cell support systems for both the Apollo
and Space Shuttle programs, which required its use in microgravity
environments.
In addition to functioning in microgravity, the SCAMP fluid
recovery system produces a flow, regardless of the position of
the supply tank in Earth's gravity. The SCAMP SCBA system applications
are also ground-based, such as those in emergency services and
industry.
The developer of SCAMP, Aerospace Design & Development
(ADD), Inc., of Niwot, Colorado, was charged with producing a
compact breathing apparatus that would meet the needs of Kennedy
Space Center rescue personnel. In a launch pad emergency, rescue
personnel must be able to crawl through a 20-inch square opening.
Therefore, the compact air system required a usage time in excess
of 30 minutes, as well as a backpack thickness of less than 5.5
inches.
Many of the propellants used aboard U.S. launch vehicles are
toxic to humans. Protective measures, traditionally provided
by an SCBA with air as a compressed gas, must be provided to
personnel handling these agents and those who must respond to
spills or other emergency situations. However, this old technology
relies upon heavy, high-pressure cylinders that the emergency
worker must carry. ADD extended its development of SCAMP by creating
a suit that offers a smaller and considerably lighter system
than the older technology. What's more, the longer reserve time
provides firefighters and hazardous materials workers greater
flexibility and a greater margin of safety.
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Aerospace
Design & Development, Inc.'s SCAMP®
is a self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) that uses supercritical
cryogenic air. |
At the heart of the SCAMP SCBA system is its cryogenic vacuum
container, or Dewar, which contains the supercritical air (-320°F)
and replaces the standard SCBA high-pressure bottles. The SCAMP
SCBA 1-hour Dewar is approximately the size of a standard 30-minute
SCBA compressed air bottle, but stores twice the quantity of
air, because of its high-density capacity.
ADD's SCAMP achieves both body cooling and breathing from
supercritical cold (cryogenic) air, therefore, no additional
systems are required. SCAMP absorbs a large fraction of body
heat. The heat is transferred from the body to the breathing
air through fluid transfer loops between the suit and heat exchangers
designed into the SCAMP backpack. This allows for a lighter cooling
system with a longer reserve capacity.
This improvement over the traditional SCBA aids both in the
reduction of injury, such as heat stress, and increases the possibility
of saving lives.
SCAMP® is a registered
trademark of Aerospace Design & Development, Inc.

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