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Alliance to Create de facto Standard for Odor Analysis and Sensor Systems Employing Membrane-Type Surface Stress Sensor

Six organizations including NIMS, Kyocera, Osaka University, NEC, Sumitomo Seika and NanoWorld jointly launched the MSS Alliance on September 25, 2015, with the purpose of establishing a de facto standard for odor analysis and sensor systems employing an ultra-small sensor element called the Membrane-type Surface stress Sensor (MSS). This initiative is intended to accelerate practical use and popularization of such systems.

A model of a mobile health monitoring device that detects exhalation components

MSS is a sensor element jointly developed in 2011 by NIMS MANA Independent Scientist Genki Yoshikawa, late Dr. Heinrich Rohrer, and Ecole polytechnique federale de Lausanne (EPFL). It is a versatile, ultra-small, super-high-sensitive sensor element capable of measuring diverse molecules in the atmosphere and liquid including odor-causing gas molecules and biomolecules such as DNA and proteins. Unlike the conventional cantilever-type sensor, the MSS can be miniaturized as it does not utilize laser light. In addition, its performance has been dramatically improved as is evident by the fact that its sensitivity is approximately 100 times greater than the conventional sensor. Expectations are high for the MSS to contribute to the development of sensor systems capable of identifying factors that are key to the enhancement of people’s lives and medical care, and converting such factors into information useful to humans and equipment.

To speed up the popularization and practical application of the MSS technology in society, NIMS had strived to create a framework for further development of the MSS technology through discussions with companies possessing key element technologies and universities. As a result, the group has reached an agreement to found a new industry-government-academia joint research framework, the MSS Alliance. Through this framework, the group aims to optimize element technologies, establish a reliable measurement system, and create a de facto standard for the new products.

Source: http://www.nims.go.jp/

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