¡¡LOS ANGELES, March 18 (Xinhua) -- A team of chemists and
physicists at the University of California in San Diego (UCSD) has developed a
tiny, inexpensive sensor chip capable of detecting homemade bombs, the
university said in a press release on Tuesday.
With the sensor chip, the researchers detect trace
amounts of hydrogen peroxide, a chemical used in the most common form of
homemade explosives.
The invention and operation of this penny-sized
electronic sensor, capable of sniffing out hydrogen peroxide vapor in the
parts-per-billion range from peroxide-based explosives, such as those used in
the 2005 bombing of the London transit system, is detailed in a paper in this
week's issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society, according to the
release.
In addition to detecting explosives, UCSD scientists
say the sensor could have widespread applications in improving the health of
industrial workers by providing a new tool to inexpensively monitor the toxic
hydrogen peroxide vapors from bleached pulp and other products to which factory
workers are exposed.
"The detection capability of this tiny electronic
sensor is comparable to current instruments, which are large, bulky and cost
thousands of dollars each," said William Trogler, a professor of chemistry and
biochemistry at UCSD and one of its inventors. "If this device were mass
produced, it's not inconceivable that it could be made for less than a dollar."
Trogler said because the team's sensor is so little
affected by water vapor, it can be used in industrial and other "real-life
applications." The university has applied for a patent on the invention, which
has not yet been licensed.
The sensor works by monitoring the variability of
electrical conductivity through thin films of "metal phthalocyanines," according
to the release.
When exposed to most oxidizing agents, such as
chlorine, these metal films show an increase in electrical current, while
reducing agents have the opposite effect -- a decrease of electrical current.
But when exposed to hydrogen peroxide, an oxidant,
the metal phthalocyanine films behave differently depending on the type of metal
used. Films made of cobalt phthalocyanine show decreases in current, while those
made from copper or nickel show increases in current.
The UCSD team used this unusual trait to build their
sensor. It is composed of thin films of both cobalt phthalocyanine and
copperphthalocyanine to display a unique signature whenever tiny amounts of
hydrogen peroxide are present.