  | 
    
       
      
      
    
          Science Fiction 
Dictionary 
        A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z 
  
     | 
      | 
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
      Nanotech Electronic Nose Sniffs Explosives Like Dogs 
	   
       
      
        
      
    A new handheld device can sniff out vapors from explosives as well as the best-trained dogs. 
  
 
( Free-Surface Microfluidics/Surface-Enhanced 
Raman Spectroscopy for Real-Time 
Trace Vapor Detection of Explosives)
 
“Dogs are still the gold standard for scent detection of explosives. But like a person, a dog can have a good day or a bad day, get tired or distracted,” said Meinhart. “We have developed a device with the same or better sensitivity as a dog’s nose that feeds into a computer to report exactly what kind of molecule it’s detecting.” The key to their technology, explained Meinhart, is in the merging of principles from mechanical engineering and chemistry in a collaboration made possible by UCSB’s Institute for Collaborative Biotechnologies .
Results published this month in Analytical Chemistry show that their device can detect airborne molecules of a chemical called 2,4-dinitrotoluene, the primary vapor emanating from TNT-based explosives. The human nose cannot detect such minute amounts of a substance, but “sniffer” dogs have long been used to track these types of molecules. Their technology is inspired by the biological design and microscale size of the canine olfactory mucus layer, which absorbs and then concentrates airborne molecules.  
Packaged on a fingerprint-sized silicon microchip and fabricated at UCSB’s state-of-the-art cleanroom facility, the underlying technology combines free-surface microfluidics and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) to capture and identify molecules. A microscale channel of liquid absorbs and concentrates the molecules by up to six orders of magnitude. Once the vapor molecules are absorbed into the microchannel, they interact with nanoparticles that amplify their spectral signature when excited by laser light. A computer database of spectral signatures identifies what kind of molecule has been captured.
 
“The device consists of two parts,” explained Moskovits. “There’s a microchannel, which is like a tiny river that we use to trap the molecules and present them to the other part, a mini spectrometer powered by a laser that detects them. These microchannels are twenty times smaller than the thickness of a human hair.”
  
I saw the idea for this kind of device demonstrated in a science fiction movie in 1985 in Runaway, by Michael Crichton. The device is a small, portable "sniffer robot":
 
 
  
(Sniffer Robot from Runaway)
In the movie, the sniffer robot was also looking for explosive agents.
 
Via UCSB Engineering.  
    Scroll down  for more stories in the same category. (Story submitted 12/4/2012)  
    Follow this kind of news @Technovelgy.
    
    
    | Email  | RSS | Blog It | Stumble | del.icio.us |  Digg |  Reddit | 
    
    
    Would
        you like to contribute a story tip?
        It's easy:  
Get the URL of the story, and the related sf author, and add
it here. 
	
	Comment/Join  discussion ( 0 )  
	
       
        
    Related News Stories - 
	("
	Engineering
") 
	
    
      
	    
		
		Jetson ONE Air Races Begin, Can Air Polo Be Far Behind? 
        'If you're one of those rarities who haven't attended a rocket-polo "carnage", let me tell you it's a colorful affair.' - John Victor Peterson, 1938.  
      
      
	    
		
		X-Control Janus-1 A Suitcase Aircraft 
        'You will notice that it... fits the suitcase nicely.' - E.D. Skinner, 1929.  
      
      
	    
		
		Time Crystals Can Now Be Seen Directly 
        'It is as you thought when you constructed the time crystal, my master Vaylan.' - NK Heming, 1952.  
      
      
	    
		
		China Steals Strato Airship Design From Google App Engine 
        '...war-balloons, or, as it would be more correct to call them, navigable aerostats.' - George Griffith, 1893.  
      
    
      
    
	Technovelgy (that's tech-novel-gee!)
        is devoted to the creative science inventions and ideas of sf authors. Look for
        the Invention Category that interests
        you, the Glossary, the Invention
      Timeline, or see what's New. 
      
     | 
      | 
    
	
		    
		   
		   
		 
      Science Fiction 
        Timeline 
  1600-1899  
  1900-1939 
  1940's   1950's 
  1960's   1970's 
  1980's   1990's 
  2000's   2010's 
		 
	Current News  
	
          
          Jetson ONE Air Races Begin, Can Air Polo Be Far Behind? 
		  'If you're one of those rarities who haven't attended a rocket-polo "carnage", let me tell you it's a colorful affair.' 
            
          Will Space Stations Have Large Interior Spaces Again? 
		  'They filed clumsily into the battleroom, like children in a swimming pool for the first time, clinging to the handholds along the side.' 
            
          Mornine Sales Robot 
		  'Robot-salesmen were everywhere, gesturing...' 
            
          Bipedal Robot Floats Gently While Walking 
		  'a walking balloon proceeded with long strides of its aluminum legs...' 
            
          Musk Idea Of Cars Talking To Each Other Predicted 70 Years Ago 
		  'My cars talk to one another.' 
            
          Elegant Bivouac Shelter Produces Water And Electricity 
		  'There was nowhere on the planet where science and technology could not provide one with a comfortable home...' 
            
          X-Control Janus-1 A Suitcase Aircraft 
		  'You will notice that it... fits the suitcase nicely.' 
            
          'AI Assistants' Are Actually Less Reliable For News 
		  'Most men updated their PIP on New Year's Day...' 
            
          YES!! Remote Teleoperated Robots predicted by Technovelgy! 
		  '...a misshapen, many-tentacled thing about twice the size of a man.' 
            
          Will Robots Ever Fold Landry? 
		  Where have you gone, Mrs. Robinson? 
            
          Will AIs Give Better Results If You're Rude To Them? 
		  'I said, "Listen up, motherf*cker.' 
            
          Cybertruck Robotic Arm F10 Drone Launch! 
		  Drone away! 
            
          Black Fungus Blocks Radiation 
		  'You were surrounded by Astrophage most of the time' 
            
          Liuzhi Process Now In Use In China 
		  'He was in a high-ceilinged windowless cell with walls of glittering white porcelain.' 
            
          Reflect Orbital Offers 'Sunlight on Demand' And Light Pollution 
		  'I don't have to tell you about the seven two-mile-diameter orbital mirrors...' 
            
          Will Robots Become Family Caregivers? 
		  'The robant and the tiny old woman entered the control room slowly...' 
            
More SF in the News Stories 
More Beyond Technovelgy science news stories 
     | 
      |