Monday, December 29, 2008

"E Nose" to sniff out harmful chemicals on International Space Station

NASA astronauts on space shuttle Endeavour's STS-126 mission will install an instrument known as "ENose" on the International Space Station (ISS) that can help protect crew members' health and safety by "smelling" dangerous chemicals in the air. The experimental ENose will monitor the space station's environment for harmful chemicals such as ammonia, mercury, methanol and formaldehyde.

The ENose, which will run continuously and autonomously, is the first instrument on the ISS that will detect and quantify chemical leaks or spills as they happen.

It fills the long-standing gap between onboard alarms and complex analytical instruments. Air-quality problems have occurred before on the International Space Station, space shuttle and Russian Space Station Mir."The ENose is a 'first-responder' that will alert crew members of possible contaminants in the air and also analyze and quantify targeted changes in the cabin environment.

The shoebox-sized ENose contains an array of 32 sensors that can identify and quantify several organic and inorganic chemicals, including organic solvents and marker chemicals that signal the start of electrical fires. The ENose sensors are polymer films that change their electrical conductivity in response to different chemicals.The pattern of the sensor array's response depends on the particular chemical types present in the air.The instrument can analyze volatile aerosols and vapors, help monitor cleanup of chemical spills or leaks, and enable more intensive chemical analysis by collecting raw data and streaming it to a computer at JPL's ENose laboratory.

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