New Chip Can Identify Liquids, Encode Messages
An anonymous reader writes "Scientists have developed a porous chip that can identify liquids instantaneously. Each liquid's distinct surface tension determines how much it seeps into the pores of the chip, which the chip uses to tell liquids apart. The researchers also decorated the chip with a secret message (ie, brand name) that only shows up when certain liquids are applied. The chip is so sensitive it can distinguish gasolines with varying proportions of ethanol, and could help clean-up crews identify spills in the field."
But can it tell mercury from galinstan? Liquid helium-3 from helium-4?
So now my ruffles will know if I'm eating them with white cheese dip or nacho cheese dip. Nice!
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What would be truly interesting is if we the common people could check the percentage of ethanol when we fill up our gas tanks, or have it monitored within our gas tanks. Being able to tell at fill-up would actually tell you which gas station gives better gas. My money's on the chips being prohibitively expensive, though.
What happens when I add an ionic or non-ionic surfactant to an aqueous solution? Can it detect that I've added SDS or Triton X-100 to water? Or would that throw the system off?
So, I clicked through TFA and the link to the paper contained within. I'm not sure why Discover refers to this piece of hardware as a 'chip.' It doesn't appear to be an electronic chip of any sort. It looks like the information about what liquid the material is dipped in is derived from studying the patterns of 'wetness' within the material's structure. But I don't see any mention of how this information would be communicated via some electrical signal to a microprocessor or other circuitry. Perhaps I am thinking in a limited context, but it seems like this material's usefulness as a sensor is still very limited.
Am I missing something?
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In the case shown adding water to ethanol changes the reaction, however, mixes of water-ethanol would have the same surface tension as some other liquids, so how do you distinguish those, lets say acetone which is just a hair higher (in terms of S.T.) than ethanol vs ethanol+1%(or whatever makes it even) water
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Any chip can detect iquid.....
Oh you mean more than once?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_m17HK97M8
create a chem id system using this and:
just have benign chemicals in it's database, give to EPA workers, then the next time a company needs a toxic spill covered up EPA worker goes "toxic, nah, the gizmo says it's probably just [benign substance], the dead animals must just be a weird migration error"
or
load database with poisons/explosives/etc, give to TSA workers, any time probable cause needed "sorry sir your sweat/saliva shows as a mix of vx and ricin, please come with us"
or
load database with illegal drugs, give to DEA, any time probable cause needed "sorry sir your "coffee" seems to be a mix of cocaine and opium, please come with be to the station"
I always wanted to know what was in Dr. Pepper. :-)
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