'Artificial tongue' can detect chemical makeup of alcoholic drinks
Drinks manufacturers and consumers may soon have a small, portable kit, not much bigger than a covid test, to check the quality and safety of alcoholic beverages. The device is being described as an "artificial tongue" because it can detect additives, toxins and the sweetness of the drink with just a few drops. Shuo Huang at Nanjing University in China says that while this first generation of the new technology can't yet test for date rape drugs in spiked drinks or detect methanol contamination, which recently resulted in the deaths of six backpackers in Laos, future versions may. Current methods for analysing alcoholic drinks, such as liquid chromatography, involve expensive and cumbersome laboratory equipment, requiring expert technicians to operate and analyse samples. The artificial tongue relies on biological nanopore technology.
Dec-17-2024, 16:00:58 GMT
- Country:
- Asia
- China > Jiangsu Province
- Nanjing (0.26)
- Laos (0.26)
- China > Jiangsu Province
- Asia
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine (0.57)
- Technology: