NASA Plans Test of 'Electronic Nose' on International Space Station

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Nov. 19, 2008

Grey Hautaluoma/Ashley Edwards 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0668/1756 
grey.hautaluoma-1@xxxxxxxx, ashley.edwards-1@xxxxxxxx 

Rhea Borja 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. 
818-354-0850 
rhea.r.borja@xxxxxxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 08-299

NASA PLANS TEST OF 'ELECTRONIC NOSE' ON INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION

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

The ENose 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. In most cases, the chemicals were identified only 
after the crew had been exposed to them, if at all. The ENose, which 
will run continuously and autonomously, is the first instrument on 
the station that will detect and quantify chemical leaks or spills as 
they happen.  

"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," said Margaret A. Ryan, 
the principal investigator of the ENose project at NASA's Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory, or JPL, in Pasadena, Calif. JPL built and 
manages the device.  

Station crew members will unpack the ENose on Dec. 9 to begin the 
instrument's six-month demonstration in the crew cabin. If the 
experiment is successful, the ENose might be used in future space 
missions as part of an automated system to monitor and control 
astronauts' in-space environments.  

"This ENose is a very capable instrument that will increase crew 
awareness of the state of their air quality," said Carl Walz, an 
astronaut and director of NASA's Advanced Capabilities Division, part 
of the Exploration System Mission Directorate, which funds the ENose. 
"Having experienced an air-quality issue during my Expedition 4 
mission on the space station, I wish I had the information that this 
ENose will provide future crews. This technology demonstration will 
provide important information for environmental control and 
life-support system designers for the future lunar outpost." 

Specifically, 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. The instrument has a wide range 
of chemical sensitivity, from fractional parts per million to 10,000 
parts per million. For all of its capabilities, the ENose weighs less 
than nine pounds and requires only 20 watts of power. 

The ENose is now in its third generation. The first ENose was tested 
during a six-day demonstration on the STS-95 shuttle mission in 1998. 
That prototype could detect 10 compounds, but could not analyze data 
immediately. The second-generation ENose could detect, identify and 
quantify 21 different chemicals. It was extensively ground-tested. 
The third-generation ENose includes data-analysis software to 
identify and quantify the release of chemicals within 40 minutes of 
detection. While it will look for 10 chemical types in this six-month 
experiment, the new ENose can be trained to detect many others. 

For more information about the ENose and the Advanced Environmental 
Monitoring and Control Project, visit: 



http://aemc.jpl.nasa.gov/instruments/enose.cfm 


For more information about NASA's exploration program, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/exploration 


For more information about the International Space Station, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/station 

	
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