Novel Version of Fibertect More Viable at Cleaning Nerve Chemical Surrogate

Part of the added benefit of this new decontamination wipe is that it contains biodegradable cotton.

Written byTexas Tech University
| 3 min read
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Part of the added benefit of this new decontamination wipe is that it contains biodegradable cotton.

A new version of Fibertect®, a nonwoven decontamination wipe created by researchers at Texas Tech University, has proven itself more viable at cleaning up a nerve chemical surrogate than the decontamination substance currently used by the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), which is currently being phased out.

Seshadri Ramkumar, lead investigator on the project and inventor of Fibertect®, said that when compared to the powdered decontaminant called M-291, the all-cotton version of nonwoven wipe paired with an activated carbon center cleaned up not only the chemical surrogate to the nerve gas soman, but also adsorbed its vapors five times better.

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