posted on 2018-09-12, 08:13authored byHeran
C. Bhakta, Vamsi K. Choday, William H. Grover
The
frequencies of notes made by a musical instrument are determined
by the physical properties of the instrument. Consequently, by measuring
the frequency of a note, one can infer information about the instrument’s
physical properties. In this work, we show that by modifying a musical
instrument to contain a sample and analyzing the instrument’s
pitch, we can make precision measurements of the physical properties
of the sample. We used the mbira, a 3000-year-old African musical
instrument that consists of metal tines attached to a wooden board;
these tines are plucked to play musical notes. By replacing the mbira’s
tines with bent steel tubing, filling the tubing with a sample, using
a smartphone to record the sound while plucking the tubing, and measuring
the frequency of the sound using a free software tool on our website,
we can measure the density of the sample with a resolution of about
0.012 g/mL. Unlike existing tools for measuring density, the mbira
sensor can be made and used by virtually anyone in the world. To demonstrate
the mbira sensor’s capabilities, we used it to successfully
distinguish diethylene glycol and glycerol, two similar chemicals
that are sometimes mistaken for each other in pharmaceutical manufacturing
(leading to hundreds of deaths). We also show that consumers could
use mbira sensors to detect counterfeit and adulterated medications
(which represent around 10% of all medications in low- and middle-income
countries). We expect that many other musical instruments can function
as sensors and find important and lifesaving applications.