Abstract

Animals have evolved to sense in complex environments through both modulation behavior including sniffing as well as sophisticated neural processing including memory and neuromodulation. Here, we explore thermal modulation of chemically diverse sensor arrays, where response patterns are based on partitioning of odorants across the array. The differential response patterns contain information about the chemical nature of the odorant for identification. By transitioning away from well-defined concentration modulation, traditionally used in the field, to thermal modulation, it is possible to capture both diagnostic patterns as well as intensity information in complex environments. This performance is demonstrated with carbon-black based, chemically diverse sensor arrays, that are thermally modulated with light at 25 mHz exposed to different analytes of varying concentrations.

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