4.6 Article

Nanosensor Based on Thermal Gradient and Machine Learning for the Detection of Methanol Adulteration in Alcoholic Beverages and Methanol Poisoning

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 22, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s22155554

Keywords

metal oxide; tin oxide; gas sensor; resistive sensor; nanowires; methanol; ethanol

Funding

  1. Autonomous Province of Trento

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A resistive gas sensor based on tin oxide nanowires is proposed in this study, which can distinguish different concentrations of methanol and ethanol through a thermal gradient and machine learning algorithms. It is suitable for detecting the adulteration of alcoholic beverages and recognizing methanol poisoning.
Methanol, naturally present in small quantities in the distillation of alcoholic beverages, can lead to serious health problems. When it exceeds a certain concentration, it causes blindness, organ failure, and even death if not recognized in time. Analytical techniques such as chromatography are used to detect dangerous concentrations of methanol, which are very accurate but also expensive, cumbersome, and time-consuming. Therefore, a gas sensor that is inexpensive and portable and capable of distinguishing methanol from ethanol would be very useful. Here, we present a resistive gas sensor, based on tin oxide nanowires, that works in a thermal gradient. By combining responses at various temperatures and using machine learning algorithms (PCA, SVM, LDA), the device can distinguish methanol from ethanol in a wide range of concentrations (1-100 ppm) in both dry air and under different humidity conditions (25-75% RH). The proposed sensor, which is small and inexpensive, demonstrates the ability to distinguish methanol from ethanol at different concentrations and could be developed both to detect the adulteration of alcoholic beverages and to quickly recognize methanol poisoning.

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