Move over
Rover: There's a new sniffing powerhouse in the neighborhood
Date: November 19, 2018
Source: American Physical Society
Some
animals have a superpower in their sense of smell. They explore, interpret and
understand their world with such sensitivity that people have enlisted canines
to help solve crime and detect cancer on the breath. Scientists at the Georgia
Institute of Technology are now homing in on the secrets behind animals' super
sniffers to develop an artificial chemical sensor that could be used for a
variety of tasks, from food safety to national security.
"We
turned to animals to understand what nature has already figured out," said
Thomas Spencer, a doctoral candidate in David Hu's lab at Georgia Tech.
"We are applying the underlying principles that we learned about these
mechanisms to design a better sensor."
Spencer
will present the group's latest design for an electronic nose that concentrates
odors for improved chemical sensing at the American Physical Society's Division
of Fluid Dynamics 71st Annual Meeting, which will take place Nov. 18-20 at the
Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta, Georgia.
Their
work began inauspiciously at a competition to develop a sensor that could
identify different varieties of cheese. Turning to nature to guide their work,
they traveled to the Atlanta Zoo to compare the way different animals sniff,
from mice to elephants.
"We
wanted to measure the sniffing frequency of animals when they are trying to
identify a new source of food or something that interests them," Spencer
said.
After
reviewing the data, they found that sniffing speed decreases as body size
increases; put another way, mice sniff faster than elephants. Using their
findings, they designed a customized pump that oscillates back and forth at the
same frequency that animals sniff. The design of their device moves airflow
around the chemical sensor in a more controlled fashion.
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