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Electronic nose

An electronic nose is a device intended to detect odors or flavors.Did you ever measure a smell? Can you tell whether one smell is just twice strong as another? Can you measure the difference between two kinds of smell and another? It is very obvious that we have very many different kinds of smells, all the way from the odour of violets and roses up to asafetida.But until you can measure their likeness and differences, you can have no science of odour. If you are ambitious to find a new science, measure a smell. An electronic nose is a device intended to detect odors or flavors. Over the last decades, 'electronic sensing' or 'e-sensing' technologies have undergone important developments from a technical and commercial point of view. The expression 'electronic sensing' refers to the capability of reproducing human senses using sensor arrays and pattern recognition systems.Since 1982, research has been conducted to develop technologies, commonly referred to as electronic noses, that could detect and recognize odors and flavors. The stages of the recognition process are similar to human olfaction and are performed for identification, comparison, quantification and other applications, including data storage and retrieval. However, hedonic evaluation is a specificity of the human nose given that it is related to subjective opinions. These devices have undergone much development and are now used to fulfill industrial needs. In all industries, odor assessment is usually performed by human sensory analysis, by chemosensors, or by gas chromatography. The latter technique gives information about volatile organic compounds but the correlation between analytical results and meme odor perception is not direct due to potential interactions between several odorous components. In the Wasp Hound odor detector, the mechanical element is a video camera and the biological element is five parasitic wasps who have been conditioned to swarm in response to the presence of a specific chemical. Scientist Alexander Graham Bell popularized the notion that it was difficult to measure a smell, and in 1914 said the following: In the decades since Bell made this observation, no such science of odor materialised, and it was not until the 1950s and beyond that any real progress was made.

[ "Chromatography", "Analytical chemistry", "Neuroscience", "Nanotechnology", "Pattern recognition", "artificial olfaction", "Machine olfaction" ]
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