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A PhD in pants!

A PhD in pants!

NEWS

10 Aug, 2018

A scientist at the Defence, Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl) is celebrating after his research into washing underpants earned him a PhD from Cranfield University.

 The unusual research topic even looked at using a cement mixer to do the laundry, mimicking the ingenious ways soldiers found to keep their clothes clean in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Mark has spent the past seven years researching the effect of continuous washing on protective clothing. The study looked at how protective systems, including the Tier 1 Pelvic Protection System, or ëblast pantsí, issued to troops during the Afghan conflict would degrade with use. At the time, the development of the protective underwear was an Urgent Operational Requirement and therefore it was not possible to do all of the testing that would normally be done during the procurement process. Dstl started work to understand how robust these items would be to help improve them for the next generation. It turned out that the garments were far tougher than had dared been hoped! 

Says Mark, ëThe introduction of fragment protective fabrics into combat clothing meant we needed to understand the effect of laundering on the performance of these fabrics. The research revealed evidence that the fabrics used retained their ballistic protective performance, while other potential fabrics showed improvement after washing.í A number of wash types were investigated in the research, which included washing in a cement mixer. This unusual method was utilised by some enterprising soldiers in Afghanistan when they didnít have access to a washing machine.

Mark adds: ëI started work in the field of body armour 20 years ago, and served with the UK Armed Forces in both Iraq and Afghanistan as part of the scientific advisory branch. With friends in the Armed Forces it became a personal battle to help protect those who were putting themselves in harmís way.í Markís research is now being used to inform the development of the next generation of fragment protective clothing for the Armed Forces.

See Mark talking about the inspiration behind his PhD project here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7Ni3vD36Ik