Wireless sensors and sensor networks for homeland security applications

► Brief summary of chemical threats of importance to homeland security. ► Origins of the most significant unmet needs in existing chemical sensors. ► Specific requirements and challenges for wireless chemical sensors and networks. ► New approach to selective wireless chemical sensing. ► New sensors...

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Veröffentlicht in:TrAC, Trends in analytical chemistry (Regular ed.) Trends in analytical chemistry (Regular ed.), 2012-11, Vol.40, p.133-145
Hauptverfasser: Potyrailo, Radislav A., Nagraj, Nandini, Surman, Cheryl, Boudries, Hacene, Lai, Hanh, Slocik, Joseph M., Kelley-Loughnane, Nancy, Naik, Rajesh R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:► Brief summary of chemical threats of importance to homeland security. ► Origins of the most significant unmet needs in existing chemical sensors. ► Specific requirements and challenges for wireless chemical sensors and networks. ► New approach to selective wireless chemical sensing. ► New sensors for toxic materials, chemical agent simulants, explosives and oxidizers. New sensor technologies for homeland security applications must meet the key requirements of sensitivity to detect agents below risk levels, selectivity to provide minimal false-alarm rates, and response speed to operate in high throughput environments, such as airports, sea ports, and other public places. Chemical detection using existing sensor systems is facing a major challenge of selectivity. In this review, we provide a brief summary of chemical threats of homeland security importance; focus in detail on modern concepts in chemical sensing; examine the origins of the most significant unmet needs in existing chemical sensors; and, analyze opportunities, specific requirements, and challenges for wireless chemical sensors and wireless sensor networks (WSNs). We further review a new approach for selective chemical sensing that involves the combination of a sensing material that has different response mechanisms to different species of interest, with a transducer that has a multivariable signal-transduction ability. This new selective chemical-sensing approach was realized using an attractive ubiquitous platform of battery-free passive radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags adapted for chemical sensing. We illustrate the performance of RFID sensors developed in measurements of toxic industrial materials, humidity-independent detection of toxic vapors, and detection of chemical-agent simulants, explosives, and strong oxidizers.
ISSN:0165-9936
1879-3142
DOI:10.1016/j.trac.2012.07.013