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Trends in odor intensity for human and electronic noses: Relative roles of odorant vapor pressure vs. molecularity specific odorant binding

Response data were collected for a carbon black-polymer composite electronic nose array during exposure to homologous series of alkanes and alcohols. The mean response intensity of the electronic nose detectors and the response intensity of the most strongly driven set of electronic nose detectors w...

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Published in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 1998-05, Vol.95 (10), p.5442
Main Authors: Doleman, Brett J, Severin, Erik J, Lewis, Nathan S
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Severin, Erik J
Lewis, Nathan S
description Response data were collected for a carbon black-polymer composite electronic nose array during exposure to homologous series of alkanes and alcohols. The mean response intensity of the electronic nose detectors and the response intensity of the most strongly driven set of electronic nose detectors were essentially constant for members of a chemically homologous odorant series when the concentration of each odorant in the gas phase was maintained at a constant fraction of the odorant's vapor pressure.
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ispartof Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS, 1998-05, Vol.95 (10), p.5442
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language eng
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source Open Access: PubMed Central; JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection
subjects Molecules
Odors
Pressure
Sensory perception
Smell
title Trends in odor intensity for human and electronic noses: Relative roles of odorant vapor pressure vs. molecularity specific odorant binding
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