Friday, July 3, 2009

New device uses carbon nanotubes to rate chillis hotness

London, May 13 (ANI): Scientists have developed a new device that takes the help of carbon nanotubes to provide an objective and cost effective way to rate how hot a particular chilli is.
According to a report in Nature News, Richard Compton, a chemist at the University of Oxford, UK, and his colleagues have made the device, which measures the accumulated concentrations of the capsaicins in a chilli simultaneously.

Capsaicins are chemicals, which cause the hotness in a chilli. The higher the concentration, the hotter a chilli tastes.

The conventional method to determine the heat of a chilli or chilli sauce was devised in 1912 by chemist Wilbur Scoville.

Scoville ratings are worked out by diluting a chilli-containing sauce to the point at which a team of five expert tasters can no longer detect the heat.

But Richard Compton and his colleagues have developed a way to get a Scoville rating for a sauce while sparing the tasters tongues, and without blowing a cooks budget.

The device that they have developed measures the accumulated concentrations of the capsaicins in a chilli simultaneously.

The technique involves coating electrodes covered in carbon nanotubes with the chilli sample. The nanotubes have a high surface area, which means that they can absorb lots of the sample.

The whole device is then dunked in an ethanol-based solution to oxidize the capsaicins, which causes current to flow.

Stronger chillies mean more electric current, said Compton.

According to Compton, his method is cheaper than the only other available tester-free method, called high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC).

The HPLC technique involves separating out the capsaicins in a sauce and working out their concentrations individually an expensive process.

By using mass-producible electrodes screen-printed with carbon nanotubes, Compton reckons he can bring down the cost of a sampler to around 30 pounds. By comparison, an HPLC machine costs around 40,000 pounds.

Compton has applied for a patent for his device and is attracting commercial interest for what he envisages as a cheap, disposable hand-held heat detector that keen cooks could use in their own kitchens. (ANI)

with thanks to Thaindian news

4 comments:

Mikan-chan said...

Hi Hemant,

I have been in LOVE with capsaicin since I was little. I thought Indonesian's capsicum was the spiciest until I browsed Wikipedia & also found your blog. I really want to know this Naga Jolokia better!! Are there any side effects of eating really spicy food? Would you give me your email address, so I can ask you many things about hot pepper's stuffs? Thanks so much ^_^

Anonymous said...

Isn't technology just grand?! I used to work in a lab running HPLC on amino acids extracted from micro-fossils. I never tried it on chiles.

Nichiro said...

mikan-chan,Okyakusama,

Shitsurai shimashitane,

I am sorry I could not reply you earlier.

Please read my blog from beginning and you would find that eating Hot peppers does you more good and no harm.

I have seen people in Tokyo standing in a line at curry rice shops and those curries are really hot.

Try Naga jolokia once . But to do that, you may have to start using hot peppers like Thai chillies and get used to heat.

If you want more info, dopost here.

Thanks again for your kind visit to my blog.

Fuyuyo aka Hemant

Nichiro said...

storm,

I was little worried about you at your last week's posting in vw.

Yes, technology is really getting Nano.
ry it out once.

Hemant