Published Date: 2/14/2025
Value Proposition: Portable and deployable platform that uses an AI-enabled, nanoparticle-based e-nose to sense explosive volatile organic compounds.
Technology Description
Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis have developed a low-power electronic nose that uses an array of chemiresistors to detect signature patterns for multiple target species. Current chemical sensing technologies use amplifiers to amplify the signal, which requires a lot of power. This technology uses a scalable approach for generating a large chemical sensor array with functionally diverse nanostructured sensing elements that are robust, highly durable, & reproducible, and unlike other systems, can test for multiple chemicals.
Above figure: Schematic illustration of the chemiresistor functionalization chamber enabling the controlled delivery of 12 different organothiols to the sensor chip to achieve 9×9 array of distinct chemiresistors
Stage of Research
Prototype being developed
Applications
- Sensing explosive volatile organic compounds (funded project) and other dangerous materials
- Medical diagnosis
- Environmental quality monitoring
- Food production
Key Advantages
- Can broadly test for different species in the air
- Reliable and robust chemical sensing
- Signature patterns are unique to different gases
- Electronic nose operates at low power
Patents
Patent application filed
Related Web Links – Baranidharan Raman Profile; Raman Lab