Exploring Scent Distinction with Polymer Brush Arrays

IF 4.4 2区 化学 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Andriy R. Kuzmyn*, Ivar Stokvisch, Gerrit-Jan Linker, Jos M. J. Paulusse and Sissi de Beer*, 
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The ability to distinguish scents, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and their mixtures is critical in agriculture, food safety, and public health. This study introduces a proof-of-concept approach for VOC and scent distinction, leveraging polymer brush arrays with diverse chemical compositions designed to interact with various VOCs and scents. When VOCs or scents are exposed to the brush array, they produce distinct mass absorption patterns for different polymer brushes, effectively creating “fingerprints”. Scents can be recognized without having to know the absorption of their individual components. This allows for a scent distinction technique, mimicking scent recognition within a mammalian olfactory system. To demonstrate the scent distinction, we synthesized different polymer brushes, zwitterionic, hydrophobic, and hydrophilic, using surface-initiated photoinduced electron transfer-reversible addition–fragmentation chain-transfer polymerization with eosin Y and triethanolamine as catalysts. The polymer brushes were then exposed to vapors of different single-compound VOCs and complex scents consisting of many VOCs, such as the water–ethanol mixture, rosemary oil, lavender oil, and whiskey scents. Quartz crystal microbalance measurements with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) show a clear difference in brush absorption for these diverse VOC vapors such that distinct fingerprints can be identified. Our proof-of-concept study aims to pave the way for universal electronic nose sensors that distinguish scents by combining mass absorption patterns from polymer brush-coated surfaces.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
6.00%
发文量
810
期刊介绍: ACS Applied Polymer Materials is an interdisciplinary journal publishing original research covering all aspects of engineering, chemistry, physics, and biology relevant to applications of polymers. The journal is devoted to reports of new and original experimental and theoretical research of an applied nature that integrates fundamental knowledge in the areas of materials, engineering, physics, bioscience, polymer science and chemistry into important polymer applications. The journal is specifically interested in work that addresses relationships among structure, processing, morphology, chemistry, properties, and function as well as work that provide insights into mechanisms critical to the performance of the polymer for applications.
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