Artificial snot used to enhance electronic nose
The experts from the University of Warwick and Leicester University have coated the sensors used by odour-sensing electronic noses with a mix of polymers that mimics the action of the mucus in the natural nose.
This greatly improves the performance of the electronic devices, allowing them to pick out a more diverse range of smells.
A natural nose uses over 100 million specialised receptors or sensors which act together in complex ways to identify and tell apart the molecules they encounter.
Electronic noses, used in a number of commercial settings including quality control in the food industry, use the same method but often have less than 50 sensors.
This means that electronic noses can discern a much smaller range of smells than the natural nose. However, the team has found a way to replicate in electronic devices how the natural nose’s mucus enhances our sense of smell.
In the natural nose the thin layer of mucus dissolves scents and separates out different odour molecules in a way they arrive at the noses receptors at different speeds/times.
Smells like what?
Humans are then able to use this information on the differences in time taken to reach different nose receptors to pick apart a diverse range of smells.
The Warwick and Leicester team created an artificial mucus layer to mimic this process. They placed a 10-micron-thick layer of a polymer normally used to separate gases on the sensors within their electronic nose.
They then tested it on a range of compounds and found that their artificial snot substantially improved the performance of their electronic nose, allowing it to tell apart smells such as milk and banana, which had previously been challenging odours for the device.
University of Warwick researcher Professor Julian Gardner said: "Our artificial mucus not only offers improved odour discrimination for electronic noses; it also offers much shorter analysis times than conventional techniques."
The final device, including the sensors and the artificial mucus, is contained in a relatively thin piece of plastic just a few centimetres square and costing less than £5 to produce.
The research, which was funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), was published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society.
You’ve read it. Now review it.
Date Published: April 30, 2007
More by this source
|
Print
|
Send to a friend
|
Rate & Comment
|
Keep up to date
If you found this item fun or informative, please let others know. Simply send to a friend or recommend it to even more people - on any of the following sites:
Latest Science News | reddit | digg.com | del.icio.us | rollyo | stumbleupon
More on snot...
Doctor, Doctor
Fears about bird flu
The Hard Sell: Sudafed congestion & headache
"Brian, it's Sue on Third!!!" Aside from simply standing up, marching over to her desk and repeatedly punching her until satisfaction is achieved, there appears to be only one way to block out relentlessly chirpy office colleagues like Sue. Can you guess what it is? Yes, that's right: take drugs! Relax, it's all legal. Our heroine - let's call her Bridget shall we? - has an excuse for caning the Sudafed like it's 1989: she's got a cold. Boo hoo! Why she didn't just take the day off is beyond me. This February, 70% of British office workers, upset by the bad weather, considered throwing a sickie. Surely having a genuine, bona fide cold must be like winning the lottery. But, snotwithstanding, Bridget has braved it into the office. Only to be rewarded by her Loud Talker of a colleague cackling down the phone. No wonder Bridget's hitting the hard stuff. Last time I took cold and flu pills, I experienced all the sensations attributed to taking narcotics: pleasant wooziness, general goodwill
Stop passing judgment on Jade Goody - she has every reason to see out her short life in front of the cameras
Most of us probably know by now that Jade Goody, aged 27, is dying of cancer. She has two young sons, aged four and five, and only weeks to live. Let's hope that the people who called her Miss Piggy and an "evil" racist are now wishing they had not done so. They shouldn't have done it in the first place. Personal comments are pointless and nasty, and racist remarks come from ignorance. I don't care if I sound self-righteous. And Goody doesn't care what anyone thinks of her plans. She's probably beyond caring, but I wonder if she ever did - apart from being obviously upset by the race row. How hurt was she by all the snotty, spiteful comments that have been plastered over the papers since she came into public view on Big Brother in 2002? We don't know, because she just brazened her way through it, made a lot of money, and now here she is, her short life nearly over, and as the curtain goes down on her act, many people seem to have changed their mind about her, or are saying they've chan



