‘Nose-like’ technology may allow cellphones to map airborne toxins in real time
May 14th, 2010 - 1:18 pm ICT by ANIWashington, May 14 (ANI): A tiny silicon chip that works a bit like a nose may one day detect dangerous airborne chemicals and alert emergency responders through the cell phone network.
“Cell phones are everywhere people are.
“This technology could map a chemical accident as it unfolds,” said Michael Sailor, professor of chemistry and biochemistry at the University of California, San Diego who heads the research effort.
In collaboration with Rhevision, Inc., a small startup company located in San Diego, Sailor’s research group at UCSD has successfully finished the first phase of development of the sensor and have begun to work on a prototype that will link to a cell phone.
The sensor- a porous flake of silicon- changes colour when it interacts with specific chemicals. By manipulating the shape of the pores, the researchers can tune individual spots on the silicon flake to respond to specific chemical traits.
“It works a little like our nose,” Sailor said. “We have a set of sensory cells that detect specific chemical properties. It’s the pattern of activation across the array of sensors that the brain recognizes as a particular smell. In the same way, the pattern of color changes across the surface of the chip will reveal the identity of the chemical.”
Their chips can already distinguish between methyl salicylate, a compound used to simulate the chemical warfare agent mustard gas, and toluene, a common additive in gasoline.
“The beauty of this technology is that the number of sensors contained in one of our arrays is determined by the pixel resolution of the cell phone camera. With the megapixel resolution found in cell phone cameras today, we can easily probe a million different spots on our silicon sensor simultaneously. So we don’t need to wire up a million individual sensors,” Sailor said. “We only need one. This greatly simplifies the manufacturing process because it allows us to piggyback on all the technology development that has gone into making cell phone cameras lighter, smaller, and cheaper.”
Fire-fighters could use this technology to detect carbon monoxide during fires and mine workers could use it to detect impending explosion in mines. (ANI)
- A new and simple sensor to sniff out shoe bombs - Oct 20, 2010
- Sensor 'could protect first responders against chemical hazards' - May 02, 2011
- Short, on-chip light pulses to boost data transfer speeds on computers - Nov 25, 2010
- Researchers create a living neon sign - Dec 20, 2011
- Dark silicon GreenDroid chip to boost smartphone battery life, performance - Sep 02, 2010
- Scientists develop 'electronic nose' that can sniff out toxins by changing colors - Sep 14, 2009
- Growing nanolasers on silicon paves way for on-chip photonics - Feb 07, 2011
- Ultra-sensitive sensor to help detect cancer signs, hidden explosives - Mar 22, 2011
- Electronic 'nose' that can predict pleasantness of novel odors created - Apr 16, 2010
- Infrared camera with sensor could make road traffic safer - Jul 07, 2010
- New way to screen breast cancer cells' ability to metastasize - Jan 09, 2011
- Scientists develop tiny sensor to sniff out toxins - Sep 14, 2009
- Tiny protozoa may help detect toxins in water sources - Dec 12, 2010
- New sensor to help detect, combat diabetes, breast cancer - Jan 22, 2010
- Now, your iPhone to act as chemical detector - Nov 29, 2009
Tags: airborne chemicals, airborne toxins, california san diego, cell phone camera, chemical accident, chemical warfare agent, color changes, emergency responders, megapixel resolution, methyl salicylate, mustard gas, pixel resolution, research effort, sensory cells, silicon chip, silicon sensor, startup company, time washington, tiny silicon, university of california san diego