Literature DB >> 30226368

Chemical Sensing at the Robot Fingertips: Toward Automated Taste Discrimination in Food Samples.

Bianca Ciui1,2, Aida Martin1, Rupesh K Mishra1, Tatsuo Nakagawa1, Thomas J Dawkins1, Mengjia Lyu1, Cecilia Cristea2, Robert Sandulescu2, Joseph Wang1.   

Abstract

The development of robotic sensors that mimic the human sensing capabilities is critical for the interaction and cognitive abilities of modern robots. Though robotic skin with embedded pressure or temperature sensors has received recent attention, robotic chemical sensors have long been unnoticed due to the challenges associated with realizing chemical sensing modalities on robotic platforms. For realizing such chemically sensitive robotic skin, we exploit here the recent advances in wearable chemical sensor technology and flexible electronics, and describe chemical sensing robotic fingers for rapid screening of food flavors and additives. The stretchable taste-sensing finger electrochemical devices are printed on the robotic glove, which simulates the soft skin, and are integrated with a wireless electronic board for real-time data transmission. The printed middle, index, and ring robotic fingers allow accurate discrimination between sweetness, sourness, and spiciness, via direct electrochemical detection of glucose, ascorbic acid, and capsaicin. The sweet-sensing ability has been coupled with a caffeine-sensing robotic finger for rapid screening of the presence of sugar and caffeine in common beverages. The "sense of taste" chemically sensitive robotic technology thus enables accurate discrimination between different flavors, as was illustrated in numerous tests involving a wide range of liquid and solid food samples. Such realization of advanced wearable taste-sensing systems at the robot fingertips should pave the way to automated chemical sensing machinery, facilitating robotic decision for practical food assistance applications, with broad implications to a wide range of robotic sensing applications.

Entities:  

Keywords:  flavor sensing; robotics; screen-printed electrodes; sourness; spiciness; sweetness

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30226368     DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.8b00778

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Sens        ISSN: 2379-3694            Impact factor:   7.711


  4 in total

1.  An epidermal patch for the simultaneous monitoring of haemodynamic and metabolic biomarkers.

Authors:  Juliane R Sempionatto; Muyang Lin; Lu Yin; Ernesto De la Paz; Kexin Pei; Thitaporn Sonsa-Ard; Andre N de Loyola Silva; Ahmed A Khorshed; Fangyu Zhang; Nicholas Tostado; Sheng Xu; Joseph Wang
Journal:  Nat Biomed Eng       Date:  2021-02-15       Impact factor: 25.671

2.  All-printed soft human-machine interface for robotic physicochemical sensing.

Authors:  You Yu; Jiahong Li; Samuel A Solomon; Jihong Min; Jiaobing Tu; Wei Guo; Changhao Xu; Yu Song; Wei Gao
Journal:  Sci Robot       Date:  2022-06-01

Review 3.  Flexible Electronics and Devices as Human-Machine Interfaces for Medical Robotics.

Authors:  Wenzheng Heng; Samuel Solomon; Wei Gao
Journal:  Adv Mater       Date:  2022-02-25       Impact factor: 32.086

Review 4.  Screen-Printed Electrodes: Promising Paper and Wearable Transducers for (Bio)Sensing.

Authors:  Paloma Yáñez-Sedeño; Susana Campuzano; José Manuel Pingarrón
Journal:  Biosensors (Basel)       Date:  2020-07-09
  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.