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Get Free AccessThis article describes a self-powered system that uses chemical reactions—the thermal excitation of alkali metals—to transmit coded alphanumeric information. The transmitter (an “infofuse”) is a strip of the flammable polymer nitrocellulose patterned with alkali metal ions; this pattern encodes the information. The wavelengths of 2 consecutive pulses of light represent each alphanumeric character. While burning, infofuses transmit a sequence of pulses (at 5–20 Hz) of atomic emission that correspond to the sequence of metallic salts (and therefore to the encoded information). This system combines information technology and chemical reactions into a new area—“infochemistry”—that is the first step toward systems that combine sensing and transduction of chemical signals with multicolor transmission of alphanumeric information.
Samuel W. Thomas, Ryan C. Chiechi, Christopher N. LaFratta, Michael R. Webb, Andrew Lee, Benjamin J. Wiley, M. R. Zakin, David R. Walt, George M M Whitesides (2009). Infochemistry and infofuses for the chemical storage and transmission of coded information. , 106(23), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0902476106.
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Type
Article
Year
2009
Authors
9
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0902476106
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