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Biomimetic Sniffing Improves the Detection Performance of a 3D Printed Nose of a Dog and a Commercial Trace Vapor Detector

Author(s)
Staymates, Matthew E.; MacCrehan, William A.; Staymates, Jessica L.; Gillen, Greg J.; Craven, Brent A.; Kunz, Roderick R; Mendum, Thomas H.e.; Ong, Ta-Hsuan; Geurtsen, Geoffrey P.; ... Show more Show less
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Abstract
Unlike current chemical trace detection technology, dogs actively sniff to acquire an odor sample. Flow visualization experiments with an anatomically-similar 3D printed dog’s nose revealed the external aerodynamics during canine sniffing, where ventral-laterally expired air jets entrain odorant-laden air toward the nose, thereby extending the “aerodynamic reach” for inspiration of otherwise inaccessible odors. Chemical sampling and detection experiments quantified two modes of operation with the artificial nose-active sniffing and continuous inspiration-and demonstrated an increase in odorant detection by a factor of up to 18 for active sniffing. A 16-fold improvement in detection was demonstrated with a commercially-available explosives detector by applying this bio-inspired design principle and making the device “sniff” like a dog. These lessons learned from the dog may benefit the next-generation of vapor samplers for explosives, narcotics, pathogens, or even cancer, and could inform future bio-inspired designs for optimized sampling of odor plumes.
Date issued
2016-12
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/108446
Department
Lincoln Laboratory
Journal
Scientific Reports
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Staymates, Matthew E. et al. “Biomimetic Sniffing Improves the Detection Performance of a 3D Printed Nose of a Dog and a Commercial Trace Vapor Detector.” Scientific Reports 6.1 (2016): n. pag.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2045-2322

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