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DIGITAL SCENT & TASTE
electronic noses and tongues
Image source: www.pexels.com/
photo/girl-sitting-on-grasssmelling-white-petaledflower-1879288/
By Dr David Maddison, VK3DSM
Computers can do a lot of things that humans can now, but taste and smell
are still firmly in our domain. Or are they? It may not be too long before
your smartphone can alert you to odours, or you can see an image of a dish
someone has cooked and then find out for yourself how it tastes.
W
e have five primary senses: hearing, sight, smell, touch and taste.
Electronics can already interface readily with vision, hearing and touch,
but what about the other two primary
senses, smell and taste? Actually, electronics interfacing with those senses
goes back further than you might think.
But they have proven more difficult
than the others.
By the way, our other senses include
balance, temperature, pain, time,
hunger, thirst & proprioception, for a
total of 10-20, depending on how you
define them.
Imagine watching an online video,
a movie at a theatre or playing a computer game and experiencing the smell
of a field of flowers or the smoke of a
disaster. The taste and smell of food or
spices could even be reproduced for a
cooking show.
We could also have an “electronic
nose” that analyses smells for various
reasons. Those would include digitising and synthesising those smells to
reproduce them at another location,
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to check food for signs of degradation,
or to ensure that batches of coffee or
wine were consistent.
Electronic noses could even be (and
are) used for smelling patients to determine disease; dogs have been successfully trained to smell cancer from the
unique chemicals that it produces. Parkinson’s disease is also said to produce
a unique smell.
Incidentally, the idea of using smell
to detect disease is not new. The
Ancient Greeks had people known
as uroscopists who would smell and
taste urine to determine disease conditions. The taste of urine was also
used to detect diabetes until about
the 1840s, when other tests were
developed.
In Australia’s Northern Territory,
electronic noses are being investigated
for detecting diseases in plants (see
siliconchip.au/link/ac4k).
Other possible or actual applications of electronic noses include:
• ensuring batch consistency in
food or other production processes
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• detecting fake or adulterated food
and drink
• checking the quality and monitoring the degradation of meat
• checking raw food ingredients for
freshness and contamination
• checking the efficiency of cleaning processes
• comparing different recipes or
food manufacturing processes
• comparing a food product with a
competitor’s
• determining the effect of substitution of one ingredient of a food product with another
• detection of bacteria or other
pathogens
• detecting drugs or explosives
• detecting land mines (as animals
are used now)
• finding truffles
• detecting pollutants in the air
or soil
Some of these jobs (like checking
food) are currently done by humans,
but different people have different
abilities in this field and some people
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.1: the location of the olfactory system. 1) Olfactory bulb. 2) Mitral cells. 3)
Bone. 4) Nasal epithelium. 5) Glomerulus. 6) Olfactory receptor cells. Source:
https://w.wiki/Cw9K
Fig.2: the olfactory system in a typical vertebrate. Each olfactory receptor
neuron (ORN) is attached to cilia; their odour receptors (ORs) are sensitive
to one particular type of odourant. Source: www.frontiersin.org/systems_
neuroscience/10.3389/fnsys.2011.00084/full
can’t experience certain tastes or
smells. So having electronic devices
to do these jobs would provide a great
deal of consistency, among other benefits.
In the future, an electronic nose
could be made into a consumer product to check for contamination or adulteration of food and drink, especially
when travelling in foreign countries
with poor hygiene standards.
Odour localisation is another possible application, which involves finding the source of a specific problem
odour when it is not obvious. An electronic nose could potentially be used
to map an area (say in a large building)
to help locate the source of a bad smell.
All the above comes under the auspices of “digital scent technology”.
For sensing or producing taste, there
is “gustatory technology”.
Challenges
Arguably, emulating a sense of smell
or taste is more difficult than emulating vision or sound. Vision fundamentally involves sensing just one type of
thing (photons), while a microphone
involves detecting sound pressure
waves.
siliconchip.com.au
In contrast, sense of taste or smell
involves sensing hundreds or thousands of different types of molecules,
and both smell and taste cannot easily
be objectively defined.
To synthesise or analyse smells and
tastes, it is important to understand
how our natural systems of smell and
taste work.
The olfactory system
The system for sensing smells is
known as the olfactory system. It is
located in the nose, with smell perception being processed in the brain
(see Fig.1).
When we smell something, we are
actually sensing chemical molecules,
either of one type or a mixture. These
chemicals cause the stimulation of
dedicated nerve cells high up inside
the nose called olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) or olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) – see Fig.2.
Each neuron is connected to cilia
(hair-like extensions), which have
odour receptors (ORs) that are sensitive to a specific chemical. They
behave like a lock and key. There are
about 500 different types of odour
receptors.
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ORNs connect to glomeruli, which
connect to mitral cells. Mitral cells
process information before conveying
it to the brain, via electrical signals,
where the smell is interpreted in the
brain according to past experience.
Odour sensation depends on the
concentration of the chemicals that
are sensed and their combination
and type. As there are many different
types of odour receptors, the sensation
depends on the specific combination
of chemicals sensed, unless it is a simple odour comprising a single type of
molecule (eg, bleach).
Gustatory system
The gustatory system is responsible
for the sense of taste, which is mainly
perceived by specialised taste receptor
cells of the taste buds on the tongue.
There is a persistent myth that different areas of the tongue sense different
tastes, but this was due to a misinterpretation of a 1901 paper by German
scientist David P. Hänig and it has
since been debunked (see https://w.
wiki/Cs$d).
May 2025 13
Today, we know that taste receptors
are distributed all over the tongue,
soft palate and even the throat; they
are not confined to specific regions.
While some parts of the tongue might
be slightly more sensitive to certain tastes, the differences are negligible. The five basic tastes (sweet,
sour, salty, bitter and umami) can
be detected wherever there are taste
buds.
In addition to the tongue, taste perception is influenced by other senses
such as smell (which is why things
taste different or not at all if you have
a blocked nose), texture, temperature
of the food and even pain receptors
incidentally activated with particularly spicy foods or with ‘cool’ tastes
like menthol.
Primary smells
Just as there are primary colours
from which all colours (red, green &
blue) can be made, and there are primary taste sensations (sweet, sour,
salty, bitter & umami), numerous primary smells there have been identified, from which many others can be
synthesised (at least in theory). The
concept of primary smells is not universally accepted and different classification schemes exist.
According to one classification
scheme (siliconchip.au/link/ac4d),
the primary smells the human nose
can detect are as follows:
• Chemical: usually smells of synthetic origin such as ammonia, bleach,
gasoline, paint etc.
• Fragrant: eg, floral smells or certain spices.
• Fruit: eg, banana, lime and orange
(lemon is a ‘fresh’ smell often used in
cleaning products).
• Minty: eg, eucalyptus, camphor,
mint and peppermint.
• Pungent: eg, blue cheese, sweat,
onions, garlic, some fermented products.
• Sickening and decaying: eg, rotting flesh, sewerage, burning rubber,
mercaptans (the odourant in natural
gas and butane).
• Sweet: eg, chocolate, caramel and
vanilla.
• Toasted/nutty: eg, almonds, peanut butter and popcorn.
• Woody and resinous: eg, timber
and natural resin smells.
According to another classification
scheme (https://w.wiki/7AMo), the primary smells are:
• Musky: eg, perfumes.
• Putrid: eg, rotten eggs.
• Pungent: eg, vinegar.
• Camphoraceous: eg, mothballs.
• Ethereal: eg, dry cleaning fluid.
• Floral: eg, roses.
• Pepperminty: eg, mint gum.
Odour intensity
There is a suggested scale of odour
intensity:
0 – no odour
1 – very weak (detection threshold)
2 – weak
3 – distinct
4 – strong
5 – very strong
6 – intolerable
Advanced smell classification
There are more complex smell classification schemes, such as the Leffingwell Odor Dataset, which contains the
Fig.3: a Principal Odour Map, analogous to a colour map but much more
complicated. Source: https://research.google/blog/digitizing-smell-usingmolecular-maps-to-understand-odor/
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smells of 3423 molecules, described by
experts. These were combined with
another data set, GoodScents, to create the SMILES (Simplified Molecular Input Line Entry System) odour
data set, which includes the smells of
4983 molecules described using 138
descriptors (siliconchip.au/link/ac4e).
Such data sets are used for research
and the classification of different
smells, as determined by large numbers of people (large numbers are
needed because people perceive
smells differently).
Another way to classify smells is
to generate a Principal Odour Map
(POM). Such a map is analogous to
a colour map showing hue and saturation, but it is vastly more complex
because there are far more parameters
describing smells than light wavelengths.
A POM contains a vast database
generated by people who rate various smells. A particular smell might
be described statistically by many
descriptors. With the use of a neural
network, they can be reduced to two
principal components representing by
two axes on a graph, as shown in Fig.3.
In that example, 400 different molecules were described using 55 different labels. Smells of individual molecules are depicted by the grey dots.
These dots can be grouped together
into similar types of smells. Based
on the smells and mapping of known
molecular structures, the Odour
Map can be used to predict smells of
unclassified and unsmelled molecular structures.
Natural vs artificial smell
recognition
Fig.4 shows the analogies between
natural and artificial smell recognition. In a human, first there are the
odour receptors on the cilia, which
connect to the glomeruli and then
the mitral cells in the olfactory bulb.
Mitral cells process information before
conveying it to the brain, where the
smell is interpreted.
The equivalent processes in an
electronic nose use a transducer as
the receptor and a signal processor to
convert the output of the transducer to
useful information. This information
is then processed by an algorithm and
a neural network to interpret the smell,
providing an identification.
As it is very difficult to associate
particular molecules with particular
siliconchip.com.au
Receptor
an
m
Hu
Mucous
Cribiform
plate
Cilia
Olfactory
nerve
Interaction
E-n
Olfactory bulb
Signal
generation
os
Vestibular cortex
Volatile compound
Sensor array: Transducer
Somatosensory cortex
Gustatory cortex (taste)
Visual cortex
Olfactory
cortex
Auditory
cortex
Signal
processing
Resistance (Ω)
e
Brain olfactory cortex
Processed signal
Input
Identification
Output
Red wine
Pattern recognition
Fig.4: a comparison of human and electronic smell sensing processes. Source: Electronic noses and disease diagnostics –
www.nature.com/articles/nrmicro823
smells, electronic noses need to be
trained using machine learning and
artificial intelligence (AI) to associate
a particular smell or group of smells
with the one that the operator is interested in detecting.
In the rest of this article, we will
look at the history of smell reproduction, electronic noses (for analysing
smells), electronic tongues (for analysing tastes), and finally, taste reproduction.
Smell reproduction in cinema
To add extra sensations to movies,
various attempts have been made to
add a sense of smell as follows. Some
are even in current use.
1868 The Alhambra Theatre of Variety in London sprayed scent into the
audience during a live theatre performance.
1906 or 1908 At the Family Theatre
in Forest City, Pennsylvania, the scent
of rose oil was blown towards the audience using an electric fan during the
display of a film, possibly about the
Rose Parade in Pasadena, California.
1916 The Rivoli Theatre in New
York was equipped with a system of
vents to blow scents into the audience
during the playing of the movie Story
of the Flowers.
1929 During the showing of the
film Lilac Time (https://youtu.be/
mmeXUJl_RMk), lilac perfume was
poured into the ventilation system of
the Fenway Theatre in Boston towards
the beginning of the film. Also in
that year, during the showing of The
Broadway Melody (https://youtu.be/
siliconchip.com.au
oYSOl0qYVE0), a theatre in New York
sprayed perfume from the ceiling.
1933 A system was installed to
deliver odours during a screening at
Paramount’s Rialto Theater in Broadway, New York.
All the above attempts to introduce
odours into films or plays were by
manual means; the timing of the delivery was not integrated electronically
into a film soundtrack or other automatic signalling system. One problem was that the smells could linger
for a long time, sometimes days. The
human nose also can’t quickly transition to the next smell until a previous
one has cleared.
This suggests an alternative, more
personal delivery means would be
ideal. Small amounts of an odourant
could ideally be delivered close to a
person’s nose and quickly cleared.
This strategy was used in some future
systems.
1939 Scentovision was developed
by Swiss inventor Hans Laube and
introduced at the New York World’s
Fair. This was later to be renamed
Smell-O-Vision. Up 32 different
smells could be delivered at individual seats by a system of pipes, and
the delivery timing and amount was
controlled by the projectionist using
a control board.
The first film produced using
this technology was Mein Traum.
The odours delivered included hay,
peaches, roses and tar, corresponding
to on-screen action.
After the one and only screening at
the World’s Fair, the technology was
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seized by police on the pretext that a
similar system was already licensed
for use in the United States (www.
imdb.com/title/tt0151530/trivia).
Investors took the matter to court, but
it was futile, and the investors lost
their investment. It is not clear what
this alternative system was.
1951 Emery Stern of New York was
granted US patent 2562959 for an
Fig.5: Emery Stern’s 1951 US patent
(2,562,959) for a scent distribution
system for motion pictures.
A perforated film, running in
synchronicity with the movie film,
was to be used to select scents.
May 2025 15
Fig.6 (left): a newspaper clipping from 1960 showing produce Michael Todd Jr and inventor Hans Laube with their SmellO-Vision device. Hans Laube is shown pointing to the vials which each contain a different scent. Those scents would be
selectively projected through tubes to every seat in the theatre. Source: https://cinematreasures.org/photos/258071
Fig.7 (right): an illustration from US Patent 2,905,049 for Smell-O-Vision. The smell is contained in the cells (12), part of a
‘train’, which is advanced according to signals on the movie reel, detected by a light beam (45) and sensor (46).
“electromechanical scent distribution
to accompany a motion-picture”. He
envisaged a system of scent containers
(item 54 near the centre of Fig.5) that
are selected by a system comprising a
perforated reel running synchronously
with the film reel.
Information on when to release
scents was encoded by holes, which
would be detected photoelectrically
to trigger scent release or stop it.
Unfortunately, at the time, there was
a craze for 3D films and wide screens,
so this scene system was left by the
wayside.
1953 General Electric announced
Smell-O-Rama, but it was never used
to make a film and the technology was
not pursued. It was demonstrated with
a 3D image of a rose and scented puffs
from an atomiser. The lack of commercialisation may also relate to the
craze for 3D films and wide-screen at
the time.
1959 Smell-O-Vision (called Scentovision on its invention in 1939 by
Hans Laube) was patented in this year
– see Fig.6. About 30 different odours
could be triggered by signals on the
movie soundtrack. It was first used in
1960; it was expensive to install and
was said to work erratically.
Individual odours were placed in
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containers on a reel, which were connected into a ‘train’ that moved according to signals on the movie track past
an air distribution system, to collect
and distribute the odours. The train
was wound onto a take-up reel (see
Fig.7). Scents were delivered to individual seats.
1959 AromaRama was used by theatre pioneer Walter Reade Jr for the
screening of Behind the Great Wall,
which was not made with the use of
AromaRama in mind. It was in colour
wide screen with four-channel sound
and 31-72 smells including earth,
firecrackers, horses, incense, grass,
oranges, restaurants, smoke and tea.
The system used for AromaRama
was similar to the 1951 patent by
Emery Stern, but the scent track was
contained on the film print itself and
not a separate reel. In preparation for
the next smell, the previous smell
was neutralised by an electrostatic
device called the Statronic, which
removed the scent particles from the
air (although the patent says a neutralising agent was used).
Fig.8: an
advertisement
from 1960 for a
movie featuring
Smell-O-Vision.
Source: www.
filmaffinity.
com/en/
film478082.
html
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.9: the configuration of conducting polymer sensor arrays for electronic
and bioelectronic nose sensors. Source: www.researchgate.net/figure/
fig3_51824845
Fig.10: an electrochemical gas
sensor. Source: www.baseapp.com/
nodesense/wireless-gas-sensors
Supposedly, the previous scent
could be cleared within two seconds,
but some observers disagreed. You
can read an unfavourable 1959 review
of the experience at siliconchip.au/
link/ac4f
1960 Smell-O-Vision was featured
in the movie Scent of Mystery, the only
movie ever made with this technology
in mind – see Fig.8. It was released
just weeks after Behind the Great Wall.
The competition between the two was
called “the battle of the smellies” by
Variety magazine.
2006 Japanese communications
company NTT, in co-operation with
a Japanese film distributor, released
smells during the showing of The New
World. They were released at three
rows of theatre seats designated “Premium Aroma Seats”.
The aromas were contained within
plastic balls that were mixed and
released at appropriate times during
the showing, as commanded by a controller connected to a computer.
2009 4DX is a multi-sensory theatre
special effects system that produces
various sensations delivered to the
individual viewer. These include rotating and vibrating seats, a ‘leg tickler’,
airflow, hot air and water spray onto
the viewer, plus scents. Theatre-wide,
special effects such as fog, flashes of
light, snow, wind can also be produced.
There are several 4DX cinemas in
Australia:
• Village Cinemas – siliconchip.
au/link/ac4l
• Monopoly Dreams – siliconchip.
au/link/ac4m
• Event Cinemas – siliconchip.au/
link/ac4n
Intrinsically conducting polymers
are used, typically polyaniline, polypyrrole, or polythiophene. They can
pick up gas concentrations greater than
10ppm and, unlike MOS sensors, do
not require heating. These sensors are
relatively easy to make and it is also
relatively easy to vary the composition. They are probably the second
most common devices used in eNoses
after MOS sensors.
For more details on conducting
polymers, see our article on Organic
Electronics in the November 2015
issue (siliconchip.au/Article/9392).
Electrochemical sensors are small
electrochemical cells, similar to a
battery, but generally with three electrodes instead of two.
The extra electrode is used for reference purposes. As a gas enters the cell,
which contains a liquid or gel electrolyte, it changes the electrochemical
characteristics of the cell, which can
be measured as a change in potential
– see Fig.10. They are not sensitive to
all gases.
Metal-oxide semiconductor (MOS)
sensors contain a chemoresistive
metal oxide coating, which changes its
resistance in response to a target gas
of interest (Fig.11). An array of MOS
devices with different coatings may
be used to make a device sensitive to
a variety of odours. These are among
the most popular sensor devices in
electronic noses.
Electronic noses may be purely electronic or bio-electronic. The purely
electronic sensors respond to a variety
of odour molecules, while in bio-electronic noses, an attempt is made to
more closely mimic the operation of
biological noses. Proteins are cloned
from biological receptor molecules
that bind to specific odour molecules.
This high level of specificity allows for
extremely high sensitivity.
An important aspect of electronic
noses is that they should be relatively
inexpensive. The gold standard for
measuring any gas mixture is gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GCMS), which is accurate and reproducible but expensive, and not amenable
to make into a miniaturised portable
device.
Electronic noses use much simpler and cheaper technology by comparison. They may not be as good as
GC-MS for identifying substances, but
they are suitable for the purposes for
which they are intended. A variety of
different types of sensors have been
used or proposed. They include:
Conducting polymer devices are
chemoresistive, which means they
change their resistance in response
to a gas of interest. They are specially
formulated to respond to particular gases. An array of different polymers or compositions may be used to
make a device sensitive to a variety of
odours (Fig.9).
Electronic noses (eNoses)
An electronic nose can detect smells
(and according to some definitions,
flavours). The basic elements of an
electronic nose are an odour collection system (equivalent to a nose in a
human), odour receptors, signal processing and pattern recognition.
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.11: the working principle of MOS electronic
nose sensors. Source: www.researchgate.net/figure/
fig1_361874229
Australia's electronics magazine
May 2025 17
Fig.12: the Cyranose 320 electronic
nose. Source: www.sensigent.com/
cyranose-320.html
Fig.13: the Sensigent MSEM 160
electronic nose. Source: www.
sensigent.com/img/pdf/MSEM%20
160%20Datasheet.pdf
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It is possible to have multiple MOS
sensors on one die. The detection
threshold of commercial versions
of these types of sensors is around
1-1000ppm. A disadvantage is their
high operating temperature of 150400°C, requiring onboard heating and
resulting in relatively high power consumption.
Nanocomposite arrays are composite materials in which two or more
phases are present, at least one of the
phases having dimensions in the nanometre (one millionth of a millimetre)
range. The components are designed
to adsorb odours of interest, causing
a change in impedance that can be
measured.
One such device that has been produced uses the conducting polymer
polyaniline in a nanostructured composite to detect ammonia in human
breath; a sign of kidney disease.
Optical sensors for electronic noses
rely on the fact that different gases
absorb different wavelengths of light.
By passing a gas between an optical
light source and receiver, and measuring the absorption at different wavelengths, the type of gas can be determined.
Piezoelectric sensors or quartz crystal microbalance sensors use piezoelectric quartz crystals with coatings
that adsorb molecules of interest. As
they do so, the resonant frequency of
the crystal changes, and that can be
measured. An array of several such
devices can be used, each sensitive
to different gases, to analyse mixtures
of gases.
Photoionisation sensors are used to
detect low concentrations of volatile
organic compounds (VOCs). These
sensors work by using UV light to
ionise the gases of interest, creating
positively and negatively charge ions.
These ions result in a current flow,
which can be measured.
Surface acoustic wave (SAW) sensors are a type of device in which
acoustic waves travel along the surface. A coating or nanostructured surface can be used that is sensitive to a
particular odour. As it is adsorbed, the
acoustic velocity changes and that can
be measured. An array with a variety
of coatings can be constructed so that
different odours can be sensed.
Commercial & experimental
eNoses
The Cyranose 320 is a handheld
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device from Sensigent (www.sensigent.
com) that is designed to detect and
identify complex chemical mixtures
that constitute aromas, odours and
fragrances (Fig.12). It can also be used
to identify simple mixtures and individual chemical compounds. It uses
an array of nanocomposite sensors as
the sensing elements, which they call
a “NoseChip”.
Pattern recognition and training
are used to teach the device to identify particular smells of interest to the
user. According to the video at https://
youtu.be/r3jvpZPjcA4 the device can
detect various pathogens and diseases
in human breath.
The MSEM 160 (Multi-Sensor Environmental Monitor) from Sensigent
is a portable electronic nose that uses
up to 30 different sensors, including
nanocomposite sensors, electrochemical sensors, MOS sensors and photoionisation sensors (Fig.13). It is available
with three different sensor configurations to detect:
1. Malodours like H2S (hydrogen
sulfide), NH 3 (ammonia), CH 3SH
(methyl mercaptan), organo-sulfur
and organo-nitrogen compounds and
mixtures.
2. Aromas like alcohols, aldehydes,
terpenes and mixtures of volatile and
semi-volatile organic compounds
(VOCs).
3. Pollutants including CO, O3, NOx
(nitrogen oxides), SOx (sulfur oxides)
& other regulated gases and mixtures.
It is also available in custom configurations.
NTT Data (see https://nttdata-
solutions.com/en/) is developing artificial nose technology controlled by artificial intelligence (AI). It is intended to
determine questions such as should a
public restroom facility be cleaned or
not, what is the optimal expiry date
for a food product, and quality control of coffee.
The nose was entered in an SAP (a
business analytics company) ‘hackathon’ competition and was tasked
with smelling coffee samples. It used
four sensors to measure various gas
values, which became the unique ‘fingerprint’ of a smell.
PEN3 is a portable electronic nose
from Airsense Analytics (see https://
airsense.com/en) that uses ten different MOS sensors (Fig.14). Once
trained for specific smells of interest,
and with the use of its pattern matching algorithm, it is designed to give
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.14 (left):
the PEN3 with the
optional “enrichment
and desorption unit (EDU)” under
it. Source: https://airsense.com/en/
products/portable-electronic-nose
Fig.15 (above): a smell.iX16
eNose chip. Source: https://smartnanotubes.com/products/
fast qualitative answers such as good/
bad or yes/no. Suggested uses are in
process control, quality control and
environmental monitoring.
SmartNanotubes (see https://
smart-nanotubes.com) has developed a multi-channel electronic nose
gas detector chip for the mass market.
The chip, which is called the smell.
iX16 (Fig.15) contains nanostructured materials that can detect multiple gases, smells and volatile organic
compounds (VOCs). The chip uses just
1µW of power.
These chips have been incorporated
into a development kit with a device
called the smell.Inspector, shown in
Fig.16. AI-based software called smell.
Annotator analyses detected odours
from the smell.Inspector and provides
information.
The eNose Company (see www.
enose-company.com) has developed
an electronic nose specifically for
detecting disease, shown in Fig.17.
It uses a variety of sensors, including MOS, conducting polymer sensors and quartz crystal microbalance
senors.
The device has been certified to
detect lung cancer, COVID-19 & colon
cancer and is under investigation for
the detection of tuberculosis, pulmonary embolism, colorectal cancer, Barrett’s oesophagus, thyroid carcinoma,
multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid
arthritis.
You can watch a video on it at
https://youtu.be/6KUwcWdUGpY
In 2002, Australian scientists at
the University of New South Wales
were reported to have developed an
electronic nose that can detect truffles,
but we can find no further details or
reference to this.
Electronic tongues (e-tongues)
IBM HyperTaste is an experimental
system that uses both electrochemical
and AI technology to taste and analyse
fluids (Fig.18).
Proposed examples of use include
checking the authenticity of food and
drink products, quality control of food
and beverages (Fig.19) and monitoring
water quality.
It consists of sixteen conductive
polymer electrochemical sensors. Signals from the sensors are sent to software in a mobile device like a smartphone, whereupon the raw data is
uploaded to a cloud AI server, analysed and classified.
Fig.16: the smell.Inspector
development kit. It contains four iX16
chips, visible on the left. Source:
https://smart-nanotubes.com/produkt/
smell-inspector-developer-kit/
Fig.17: an electronic nose for
disease detection from The
eNose Company. Source: www.
enose-company.com/wp-content/
uploads/2022/10/1665128402161.jpg
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.18: IBM’s HyperTaste device
‘tasting’ liquid in a glass. In this case, it
identified a certain authentic gin out of
several fake alternatives. Source: IEEE
Spectrum – siliconchip.au/link/ac4o
Australia's electronics magazine
May 2025 19
Fig.19: a
classification of
various fruit juices
and wines by
the HyperTaste.
Source: https://
dataconomy.
com/wp-content/
uploads/2022/06/
HyperTasteAI-based-etongue-analyzesthe-chemicalcomposition-ofliquids-3.jpg
In tests, the device has been able
to identify different types of bottled
mineral water, identified fruit juices
by fruit type, detected counterfeit alcoholic beverages, identified wines by
brand and place of origin and determined the intensity of coffee.
It has also been used on the autonomous ship Mayflower to sample seawater.
Producing specific odours
For research purposes, specific
odours can be produced with an olfactometer. This is a device that produces
particular odours at precise concentrations for subjects to smell. The purpose
is usually scientific research, to test
the ability to smell certain odours or
to detect odours, or for market research
to test new products.
An example of a commercial olfactometer used for research is shown
in Fig.20. It appears to be a Burghart
Research Olfactometer OL023 (see
siliconchip.au/link/ac4g). The smells
are released through a plastic tube, and
the response of a test subject’s brain
can be measured in a functional MRI
(fMRI) machine.
Producing specific tastes
The following devices can be used
to synthesise tastes by electrical stimulation of the tongue or by the delivery of chemicals.
Professor Yen Ching-Chiuan at KeioNUS CUTE Center, Smart Systems
Institute of the National University of
Singapore, has developed an experimental digital taste stimulator that
stimulates tastes using both electrical
and smell stimuli (Fig.21).
“Electric salt” is a device developed
by Professor Homei Miyashita with
the purpose of enhancing the salty
flavour of food.
This is to allow Japanese people,
who are said to consume too much
salt, to reduce the intake of salt while
maintaining the desired taste. The
devices are in the form of a spoon and
a bowl. A chopstick device has also
been developed.
The tongue is electrically stimulated
with a waveform at 0.1-0.5mA with
an undisclosed voltage and shape.
The intensity of the current can be
adjusted by the user. The devices are
said to increase the perception of the
saltiness of food by 1.5 times.
A gustometer is a device used in
scientific research to deliver to the
tongue a predetermined concentration and volume of a substance for
taste testing, over a specified period.
It is named after the gustatory stimulus that arises from a chemical which
activates the taste cells of the tongue,
resulting in the perception of flavour.
The liquid under study is delivered
to the tongue via a plastic tube. The
device is used for studies of taste perception in people and animals and
functional MRI can be used to study
the brain’s response to various taste
stimuli.
An example is shown in Fig.22 and
a subject under test in an MRI machine
can be viewed at www.wur.nl/en/
show/gustometer.htm
Fig.20: a research olfactometer at Wageningen University & Research. Source:
www.wur.nl/en/show/olfactometer.htm
Fig.21: an experimental digital taste
stimulator. Source: https://cutecenter.
nus.edu.sg/projects/digital-flavor.html
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
20
Silicon Chip
The Norimaki Synthesiser was
an experimental Japanese device,
invented by Professor Homei Miyashita
of Meiji University, that simulated
tastes.
A device was placed in contact with
the tongue, which had agar gels containing the five basic tastes: sweet,
umami, bitter, acidic and salty (see
Fig.23). These tastes can be considered analogous to the primary colours
of light.
A voltage could be supplied to individual taste gels (see www.dailymail.
co.uk/sciencetech/article-8359459/).
With no voltage applied, a user would
experience all five tastes. If a voltage
is supplied to one or more individual
tastes, the cations (positively charged
atoms or molecules) move away from
the tongue to the cathode side, so that
taste is minimised.
The intensity of the sensation
depends on the voltage and current
supplied via the control panel. The
device is said to be able to simulate
almost any taste, but not fragrances or
spicy flavours. A Norimaki is a sushi
roll wrapped in seaweed, which the
device resembles. You can watch a
video on this device at https://youtu.
be/7HIm4LoAZxU
NTT DOCOMO, a large Japanese
telecommunications company, has
developed a technology to share tastes
online. A taste is first analysed and
converted to 25 parameters defining
the taste, then transmitted by digital
means and recreated from a palette of
the five basic tastes (sweet, sour, salty,
bitter and umami) using 20 types of
base liquid.
A proprietary algorithm is used to
take into account different individual’s taste perceptions.
Taste the TV (TTTV) is a lickable
TV screen that allows users to experience various tastes that are sprayed
onto it from a carousel of ten canisters (Fig.24). A plastic film is rolled
over the screen to allow new tastes to
be experienced and also for hygienic
reasons between users.
It is proposed to be used for taste
competitions, for the training of chefs
and to experience the tastes presented in a movie. It was invented
by Professor Homei Miyashita from
Meiji University in Tokyo who also
invented the Norimaki Synthesizer
mentioned above. We are hoping that
this idea will not be combined with
a touchscreen!
SC
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.22: a gustometer made using off-the-shelf modular pump system
components: (1) Cetoni BASE 120 module with five low-pressure syringe pump
modules, (2) clamp, (3) computer-controlled solenoid valves, (4a) syringe
holders, (4b) syringe piston holders, (5) upright support structure, (6) highprecision glass syringes, (10) tubing connections, (11) ferrules for tubing.
Source: https://edspace.american.edu/openbehavior/project/novel-gustometer/
Fig.23: the end of a cylinder which is placed against tongue. The colours
(food dye) are just to distinguish the different gels. Source: www.dezeen.
com/2020/05/28/norimaki-synthesizer-device-taste-technology
Fig.24: Prof. Homei
Miyashita’s TTTV device.
There are ten spray
canisters (right) to apply
various taste chemicals to
an LCD screen (left). A roll
of plastic film advances
between tastes or between
different users.
Australia's electronics magazine
May 2025 21
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