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Re: joshgets46 post# 6120

Sunday, 02/07/2010 10:30:25 AM

Sunday, February 07, 2010 10:30:25 AM

Post# of 31561
IT DOES! The market is huge and no one has a product that is currently able to do the job. With the General Dynamics, Viaspace, Sionex and Imaginative Technologies Consortium and funding by the DOD for continued research, they may eventually provide the needed technology to do the job and get in on the ground floor of this lucrative market.

VIASPACE Press Release

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VIASPACE to Demonstrate New System for Chemical, Explosive and Toxic Gas Detection to U.S. Army
05/04/2009
Under $750,000 Phase II Contract



PASADENA, CA-May 4, 2009-VIASPACE Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: VSPC) a clean energy company with subsidiary operations in security-related systems and technology, has scheduled a mid-May 2009 field demonstration of its new detection and analysis system for identifying hazardous chemicals, explosives, industrial toxic gases, and the chemical components of improvised explosive devices (IEDs). The demonstration is part of a phase II contract awarded by the U.S. Army in August 2008. The contract provides up to $750,000 in funding over a two-year period.

Through its subsidiary Ionfinity, VIASPACE is developing a new chemical-agent sensor in joint collaboration with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, General Dynamics, Sionex, and Imaginative Technologies. The program, entitled "Advanced Robotic Detection of Chemical Agents, Toxic Industrial Gases, and IEDs for Force Health Protection," was awarded by the U.S. Army's Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Program. The objective of the program is to develop and demonstrate a prototype-an enhanced version of General Dynamics' JUNOTM hand-held chemical agent detector incorporating VIASPACE's chemical-agent sensor-that can be mounted onto unmanned ground vehicles for missions involving combat-casualty care and protection of medical personnel.

Ionfinity also has a $786,000 contract with the U.S. Navy entitled "Miniature Electronic Sniffer for Navy Vertical Take off Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (VTUAVs)"

Ionfinity Chairman, Chief Operating Officer and Principal Investigator James Weiss said: "We believe this and other security-related systems being developed at Ionfinity and through VIASPACE's collaborations will be able to meet the ongoing needs for improved capabilities to detect a range of hazardous chemicals and gases, explosives and other dangerous substances and materials. Due to the nature and number of these threats, detection systems also have to be easy-to-use, provide timely and accurate readings, and be compact and durable."

In addition to the security industry, in which approximately $55 billion is spent annually, Weiss sees potential for this new detection system to be applied in chemical analysis and monitoring for defense and homeland security, and commercial applications in environmental monitoring, agriculture and medicine.

According to Company information, the chemical-sensor system includes: 1) a powerful new detector called a Differential Mobility Spectrometer; 2) a non-radioactive ionization method that does not fragment or multiply-ionize sampled specimens; and 3) a micro-gas chromatograph for confirmation and enhanced detection capability. The system will detect chemicals at anywhere from parts-per-trillion (ppt) to parts-per-billion (ppb) levels within 6 seconds.