Monitoring the Air Quality in a Closed Chamber Using an Electronic Nose

972493

7/1/1997

Authors
Abstract
Content
An Electronic Nose is being developed at JPL and Caltech for use in environmental monitoring in the International Space Station. The Electronic Nose (ENose) is an array of 32 polymer film conductometric sensors; the pattern of response may be deconvoluted to identify contaminants in the environment. An engineering test model of the ENose was used to monitor the air of the Early Human Test experiment at Johnson Space Center for 49 days. Examination of the data recorded by the ENose shows that major excursions in the resistance recorded in the sensor array may be correlated with events recorded in the Test Logs of the Test Chamber.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/972493
Citation
Ryan, M., Homer, M., Buehler, M., Manatt, K., et al., "Monitoring the Air Quality in a Closed Chamber Using an Electronic Nose," International Conference on Environmental Systems, Lake Tahoe, Nevada, United States, July 14, 1997, https://doi.org/10.4271/972493.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
7/1/1997
Product Code
972493
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English