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Seven years later, he and the co-founders of his fire sensor company, Torch Sensors , are on the road to Los Angeles to join the fight against one of the largest wildfires in California history.
His invention, the Torch sensor, measures thermal, gas, and temperature levels across a 10 acre swath, and via an app, provides users with immediate warnings within minutes of impending fires. For many victims of the deadly wildfires in Los Angeles Country, which leveled an area more than twice the size of Manhattan, it might seem like too little too late.
At least 27 people have been killed although the indirect death toll from toxic air could end up being in the thousands , more than 40, acres burned, and 17, structures destroyed.
But the ultimate lesson of these deadly fires may not be what could have been, but what could be done next time. Some tech startups are trying to address that very issue. Tremsin was inspired after witnessing the devastation from the Napa Valley fires, which happened not far from his home.
At Stanford, Dong and fellow researcher Eric Appel, an associate professor of materials science and engineering, have been developing a sprayable, water-enhancing gel designed to protect buildings from wildfire damage. Their research, published last August in the scientific journal Advanced Materials, shows that the new gel is significantly more effective than existing commercial gels.