SBIR-STTR Award

Electrochromic + Anti-Fog + Prescription Lens Personal-Protective Equipment (Ppe) Eyewear Based On Unique, Very Low Power, Conductive Coatings And Leveraging Unique, Ansi Z87.1-/Military-Qualified Ele
Award last edited on: 2/9/2021

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NIOSH
Total Award Amount
$149,989
Award Phase
1
Solicitation Topic Code
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Principal Investigator
Prasanna Chandrasekhar

Company Information

Ashwin-Ushas Corporation Inc

2 Timber Lane Unit 301
Marlboro, NJ 07746
   (732) 739-1122
   N/A
   www.ashwin-ushas.com
Location: Multiple
Congr. District: 06
County: Monmouth

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R43OH012080-01A1
Start Date: 9/1/2020    Completed: 2/28/2021
Phase I year
2020
Phase I Amount
$149,989
With regard to Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Eyewear technologies, a major occupational hazard in high risk occupations such as manufacturing, mining, construction, warehousing, environmental remediation/- cleanup, biomedical cleanup, and in work needing protection against bio-particles, chemical agents and nanomaterials, but one which has received very limited attention to date, is that associated with the worker transitioning from very bright to dark areas; fogging of PPE exacerbates this. The PPE wearer critically needs automated, hands-free light/dark (L/D) and defogging control, while accommodating prescription lenses. Per OSHA/DoL, 5,147 workers were killed on the job in 2017 (3.5/100,000), with 20.7% in construction, a slightly smaller number in indoor/outdoor warehousing; non-fatal injuries are many times this; a significant portion of these are ascribable to L/D transition, fogging and prescription lens issues. Current PPE technologies, e.g., photochromics (needing UV light, not working indoors/in cars), clip-on sunshades, are grossly inadequate; indeed, US Army Public Health Command specifically prohibits photochromics/clip-ons for military personnel; OSHA strongly recommends against them. Other electrochromics (changing color with

Public Health Relevance Statement:
With regard to Personal Protective Eyewear equipment technologies (PPE), a major occupational hazard in high risk industrial sectors and occupations such as manufacturing, mining, construction, environmental remediation/-cleanup, biomedical cleanup, and warehousing (as substantiated in recent OSHA statistics), but one which has received very limited attention to date, is that associated with the worker transitioning from very bright to dark areas, the accompanying fogging of protective eyewear, and the need to accommodate users with prescriptions [1-4]; this is especially amplified in, e.g., protective suits worn in biomedical (e.g. Ebola/Zika) and other bio-/environmental-hazard work, which must generally be worn in hot, humid, sunny environments. Now in very recent prior and ongoing work overcoming drawbacks of prior electrochromic as well as photochromic and defogging technology [3-11], this firm has developed [12] and patented [13] a new electrochromics technology, based on unique, matched-dual-polymer conducting polymer (CP) electrochromics, with excellent performance, overcoming drawbacks preventing practical, commercial electrochromic eyewear heretofore [1-11]; electrochromic spectacles and goggles have been demonstrated with photosensor-based, automated, Li-battery-powered function, and a new, active anti-fogging technology has been combined with this electrochromics technology, with eyewear having combined electrochromic + defogging function, defogging in less than 4 seconds, and showing excellent electrochromic performance and low power consumption. The proposed work will leverage this to develop PPE with combined, electrochromics + antifogging + prescription lens capability; the latter will require a radical redesign of our current frames and layout. The work will result in practical PPE suitable for use in all the above-identified applications; it will also address high-volume-manufacture issues, with major eyewear manufacturer partners identified; it will eventually lead to a commercially viable, inexpensive (est.

Project Terms:
No Project Terms available.

Phase II

Contract Number: ----------
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase II year
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Phase II Amount
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