The bio-electric nose that mimics the human nose can sniff out low levels of bacteria and other microbes by detecting the off flavor they give off.
![Traces Of Bacteria In Water Detected With Human-Like Electronic Nose Traces Of Bacteria In Water Detected With Human-Like Electronic Nose](https://images.medindia.net/health-images/1200_1000/bacteria3.jpg)
Water that smells bad is not necessarily toxic, like a bad-smelling shirt which has not been washed.
"We wanted to develop a way to detect and remove this kind of contamination, so people are happy to drink water," said professor Tai Hyun Park from from Seoul National University who led the research.
Traditionally, water was tested for contamination with bacteria by taking a sample and trying to grow the bacteria in the lab with large scientific equipments such as gas chromatography or mass spectroscopy.
The new study shows how technology that mimics the human nose can sniff out low levels of bacteria and other microbes by detecting the off flavor they give off. The new nose-like device can detect smells at very low concentrations of just 10 nanogram per litre of water. It is also very sensitive and can spot a particular smell in a cloud of others.
"Our eventual goal is to develop a real human nose-like bioelectronic nose," Park added. In the human nose, there are about 400 different olfactory receptors. "If we could develop our technology to include all of these, we would have a device that could smell anything we can, at lower concentrations," the authors noted.
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The study was published in the journal Biosensors and Bioelectronics.
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