With the use of neat or composite carbon fibers in the form of woven or nonwoven fabric are great for achieving exceptional ballistic performance and will be a huge factor in protecting someone's body from any type of bullet or sharp object headed in their direction. With these stated it will be possible to recreate Iron Man's suit in order for it to become body armor. Correspondingly, as seen in the third Iron Man movie, Tony Stark (Iron Man), undergoes injections of a super-soldier serum called Extremis that enhances strength and can regenerate limbs and cure wounds. While “Extremis” is made up from comic books and productions, real life scientists are currently working to create similar “super serums” in the real world by using nanomedicine. According to eScienceCommons, Scientist are also targeting the nanoparticles therapeutics field. Shuming Nie, chair of biomedical engineering at Emory and Georgia Tech and the director of the Emory-Georgia Tech Cancer Nanotechnology Center states, “These are agents that you can inject into the human body two or three hours before surgery… A surgeon can then visualize where the tumors are, because they’re
With the use of neat or composite carbon fibers in the form of woven or nonwoven fabric are great for achieving exceptional ballistic performance and will be a huge factor in protecting someone's body from any type of bullet or sharp object headed in their direction. With these stated it will be possible to recreate Iron Man's suit in order for it to become body armor. Correspondingly, as seen in the third Iron Man movie, Tony Stark (Iron Man), undergoes injections of a super-soldier serum called Extremis that enhances strength and can regenerate limbs and cure wounds. While “Extremis” is made up from comic books and productions, real life scientists are currently working to create similar “super serums” in the real world by using nanomedicine. According to eScienceCommons, Scientist are also targeting the nanoparticles therapeutics field. Shuming Nie, chair of biomedical engineering at Emory and Georgia Tech and the director of the Emory-Georgia Tech Cancer Nanotechnology Center states, “These are agents that you can inject into the human body two or three hours before surgery… A surgeon can then visualize where the tumors are, because they’re