| Literature DB >> 33806819 |
Johannes Full1, Yannick Baumgarten1, Lukas Delbrück1, Alexander Sauer1,2, Robert Miehe1.
Abstract
The technological advantages that biosensors have over conventional technical sensors for odor detection and the role they play in the biological transformation have not yet been comprehensively analyzed. However, this is necessary for assessing their suitability for specific fields of application as well as their improvement and development goals. An overview of biological basics of olfactory systems is given and different odor sensor technologies are described and classified in this paper. Specific market potentials of biosensors for odor detection are identified by applying a tailored methodology that enables the derivation and systematic comparison of both the performance profiles of biosensors as well as the requirement profiles for various application fields. Therefore, the fulfillment of defined requirements is evaluated for biosensors by means of 16 selected technical criteria in order to determine a specific performance profile. Further, a selection of application fields, namely healthcare, food industry, agriculture, cosmetics, safety applications, environmental monitoring for odor detection sensors is derived to compare the importance of the criteria for each of the fields, leading to market-specific requirement profiles. The analysis reveals that the requirement criteria considered to be the most important ones across all application fields are high specificity, high selectivity, high repeat accuracy, high resolution, high accuracy, and high sensitivity. All these criteria, except for the repeat accuracy, can potentially be better met by biosensors than by technical sensors, according to the results obtained. Therefore, biosensor technology in general has a high application potential for all the areas of application under consideration. Health and safety applications especially are considered to have high potential for biosensors due to their correspondence between requirement and performance profiles. Special attention is paid to new areas of application that require multi-sensing capability. Application scenarios for multi-sensing biosensors are therefore derived. Moreover, the role of biosensors within the biological transformation is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: application field; biointelligence; biological transformation; market analysis; odor sensor; performance profile; requirement profile; technology assessment
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33806819 PMCID: PMC8004717 DOI: 10.3390/bios11030093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1Structure of the human olfactory system according to Cave et al. [28]. The olfactory epithelium, located in the nasal cavity, mainly consists of basal and sustentacular cells as well as olfactory sensory neurons. On the upper side, neurons run through the cribriform plate of the skull towards the olfactory bulb of the brain. On the lower side, their thin cilia protrude in the mucus layer secreted by the Bowman’s gland. Odorant receptor proteins embedded in the ciliary membrane allow the binding of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) solubilized in mucus. Binding of a VOC to the receptor triggers a molecular transduction cascade, as shown on the right, resulting in an influx of mainly calcium ions. Additional efflux of chloride ions is thought to further increase the depolarization.
Figure 2Overview of different technologies for odor detection. Own illustration, based on [20,28,29,30,31].
Figure 3Overview of market volumes in billion euro (EUR) of different application fields in Germany [64,65,66,67,68,69].
Evaluation of the fulfillments of performance criteria by bioelectronic odor sensors; fields: 0 = is fulfilled worse by comparison; 1 = is fulfilled equally well or no clear statement to be made; 2 = is fulfilled comparatively better.
| Properties | Fulfillment | Rating | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| High sensitivity | Because of the natural binding of olfactory receptors (ORs) with the specific ligand, the sensor can react even to very small amounts of analyte. | 2 | [ |
| High accuracy | High accuracy due to natural binding of OR with specific ligand. | 2 | [ |
| High resolution | Substances can be detected in very high resolutions at a level of nanomoles (or lower). | 2 | [ |
| High repeat accuracy | Currently there are still problems with the stability of the results. No high repeat accuracy can be guaranteed yet. | 0 | [ |
| High selectivity | It can be tested very specifically for certain substances. | 2 | [ |
| High specificity | Good results for falsely positive and falsely negative measurements. | 2 | [ |
| Low weight | A compact and light design for biosensors in comparison to analytical instruments allows online monitoring. Portable devices (sensors on chip) are currently in testing phases. No advantages. Probably no significant advantages over electronic noses to be expected. | 1 | [ |
| Small dimensions | Analytical instruments are large benchtop systems permanently installed in laboratories. There are electronic noses with a diameter of a few cm. The same is possible for biosensors. Probably no significant advantages over electronic noses to be expected. | 1 | [ |
| Low cost | The manufacturing costs for biological odor sensors are not yet finally known. Because of high research and development costs and complex production processes, a high sales price can be expected. For comparison, analytical instruments can cost up to USD 30,000. Electronic noses are available from USD 200. | 1 | [ |
| High durability | Sensors, which use cells as bioreceptors, currently have a lifetime of just about a few weeks. The durability of these systems, especially for use as industrial sensors, are not reported. | 0 | [ |
| Low maintenance effort | Bioreceptors must be replaced regularly. Replacement receptors must be stored correctly. | 0 | [ |
| Short measuring duration | Measuring times for biosensors are reported from 5–30 s. Total measuring process takes 5 min due to sample preparation and pauses between measurements. This is comparatively faster than analytical instruments but in the same range as electronic noses. | 1 | [ |
| Operability | Usability cannot be conclusively evaluated yet. However, odor sensors allow a non-invasive measuring method that does not require the extraction of sample material. | 1 | [ |
| Resistant to environmental influences | Sensors must be protected against environmental influences. Susceptible to humidity and temperature fluctuations. | 0 | [ |
| Multi-sensing capability | Biosensors are able to measure several different substances simultaneously. By multiplexing/multi-channeling various naturally occurring or synthetically optimized biological detection elements (olfactory receptors, olfactory receptor derived proteins, odorant binding protein), the bioelectronic nose can detect a variety of combinations of different VOCs. Although only a few multiplexed systems have been presented so far, multi-sensing is considered to be a decisive advantage over technical odor sensors in terms of mimicking and digitizing the sense of smell. | 2 | [ |
Figure 4Performance profile of biosensors for odor detection in comparison to competitive technical odor sensors, based on Table 1; fields: 0 = is fulfilled worse by comparison; 1 = is fulfilled equally well or no clear statement to be made; 2 = is fulfilled comparatively better.
Figure 5Evaluation of the requirement criteria on their importance for the categories of (a) measurement quality; (b) handling; (c) technical construction and production; 0 = not important, 1 = rather unimportant 2 = important, 3 = very important; sample size: 11.
Figure 6Statistical variances of the survey results shown in Figure 5 (red = higher values, green = lower values); sample size: 11.
Figure 7Results of the expert survey on the assessment of the market potential of (a) existing applications and (b) newly identified applications; 1 = very low potential, 2 = low potential, 3 = neutral potential, 4 = high potential, 5 = very high potential; sample size: 11.
Figure 8Odor detection biosensors as examples for biology–technology interface (BTI) systems following Miehe et al. [10]. Biosensors assume a special position as they can be considered as (a) an application of a BTI-based system, as well as (b) an enabler of a superordinate BTI-based system (i.e., bioreactor with cells that are generating a product).