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The device, developed by scientists from the Universities of Glasgow and Strathclyde, can taste subtle differences between drams of whisky using properties in gold and aluminium to test differences between spirits and could be ultimately used to help cut down on the trade in counterfeit alcohol.
In a new paper published on Tuesday in the Royal Society of Chemistry’s journal ‘Nanoscale’, the engineers describe how they built the tiny taster and used it to sample a selection of famous Scotch whiskies from well-known brands such as Glenfiddich, Glen Marnoch and Laphroaig in their experiment.
“We call this an artificial tongue because it acts similarly to a human tongue like us, it can’t identify the individual chemicals which make coffee taste different to apple juice but it can easily tell the difference between these complex chemical mixtures,” said Alasdair Clark, of the University of Glasgow’s School of Engineering and the paper’s lead author.
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“While we’ve focused on whisky in this experiment, the artificial tongue could easily be used to ‘taste’ virtually any liquid, which means it could be used for a wide variety of applications. In addition to its obvious potential for use in identifying counterfeit alcohols, it could be used in food safety testing, quality control, security really any area where a portable, reusable method of tasting would be useful,” he said.
Sub-microscopic slices of gold and aluminium, arranged in a checkerboard pattern, act as the so-called tastebuds in the team’s artificial tongue.
The researchers poured samples of whisky over the tastebuds which are about 500 times smaller than their human equivalents and measured how they absorb light while submerged.
Statistical analysis of the very subtle differences in how the metals in the artificial tongue absorb light what scientists call their plasmonic resonance allowed the team to identify different types of whiskies.
The tongue was able to taste the differences between the drinks with greater than 99 per cent accuracy. It was capable of picking up on the subtler distinctions between the same whisky aged in different barrels, and tell the difference between the same whisky aged for 12, 15 and 18 years.
The paper, titled ‘Whisky tasting using a bimetallic nanoplasmonic tongue’, covers the findings of the research conducted by engineers and chemists from the Universities of Glasgow and Strathclyde and supported by funding from the Leverhulme Trust, the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council.