Skip to main content

Nanooze Magazine

Exploring the world
of science and nanotechnology...

menu

  • About Us
  • Articles
  • Blog
  • Meet a
    Scientist
  • Downloads
  • Glossary
  • Contact
  • Search

In this section:

  • About Us
  • Articles
    • Chemistry
    • General Nanotechnology
    • Nanobiology and Nanomedicine
    • Nanomaterials and Nanodevices
    • Nanotechnology and the Future
    • Nanotechnology in Consumer Products
    • Nanotechnology Primer
    • Tools of Nanotechnology
  • Blog
  • Meet a Scientist
  • Downloads
  • Glossary
  • Subscribe
  • Search
Home → Articles → Nanobiology and Nanomedicine → The Bionic Nose

The Bionic Nose

Posted on November 5, 2013 by Lynn Charles Rathbun

So your nose is a super sniffing machine able to tell the different between 4000 to 10,000 different odors. Your nose has about one-hundred million tiny special things called receptors that can bind a particular odor molecule and when it does bind, it sends a signal to your brain and your brain tells you what you smelled.

Can scientists build a fake nose? Well sort of. What you need is some kind of part that would be able to bind different odor molecules and then wire that up to something that would transfer a signal to a computer which might act as a brain. The thing that transfer the signal is pretty simple. A special class of transistors, called ‘field effect transistors’ are sensitive to their environment. They can ‘sense’ changes in their environment. When something in their environment changes (like a new molecule is introduced) then their ability to conduct electricity changes. If you can measure how much electricity is going through one of these transistors then you measure what the transistor is sensing. That is the easy part.

The harder part is making a transistor specific for an odor molecule. In your nose, the mucus layer helps protect the receptors but allows molecules to diffuse in. To make a fake nose, scientists use different kinds of films like plastic wrap. This is a special kind of plastic wrap because it only lets certain kinds of molecules to pass through. Cover one of these field effect transistors in plastic wrap and you can build a sensor that can ‘smell’ one kind of odor molecule. Do the same thing with a different kind of plastic wrap and you have another. And again and again until you have a couple of thousand different kinds of odor sensors. Then maybe you have a fake nose. Sound crazy? Well there are a number of groups trying to do just that. Making fake noses for things like ‘smelling’ diseases, or maybe even dangerous stuff like bombs. One important thing about these fake nose is that they never get tired or get stuffy. So they are smelling all of the time.

 

Image Sources: University of Maryland | Chemical Technology | 3Dchem

 

← Carbon Nanotubes and Cancer Nanofood ! →

Featured Posts

A Tiny Forest?

Everything we do in science is always predictable, right? It always comes out the way we plan it.... read more

Seeing Shapes of Molecules

How do we know if a molecule has a shape? Well, there are various ways, but the most direct is to... read more

View All Featured

Related Resources

  • NNIN Education Site
  • NNIN Nanotechnology Education Resouce Database
  • Education Portal at Nano.gov (US Government)
  • NISENet – Nanoscale Informal Sciece Education Network
  • Nano4me — the Nanotechnology Applications and Career Knowledge Network

Print Issues

Print issues of Nanooze are distributed free to classrooms on request.

Credits

Prof. Carl Batt Cornell University, Editor
Emily Maletz, Emily Maletz Graphic Design, Designer
Lynn Rathbun, CNF Laboratory Manager

Cornell University ©2013
Rights restricted.

Disclaimer

Nanooze is a project of the Cornell Nanoscale Facility part of the National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure (NNCI).