Los Angeles Times

Is that apple ripe enough? Ask your smartphone

A small, inexpensiv­e device that analyzes light can size up a piece of fruit without the squeeze test.

- DEBORAH NETBURN deborah.netburn @latimes.com

Scientists have developed a handheld device that uses a tiny sensor to instantly determine the ripeness of a piece of fruit — no squeeze test necessary.

It could be a gamechange­r for grocery shoppers who feel the need to fondle several pieces of fruit in the store before deciding what ultimately makes it into the shopping cart. (You know who you are.)

The new instrument, described this week in Scientific Reports, is a small and inexpensiv­e spectromet­er, which can be constructe­d for just under $250 and interfaces wirelessly with a smartphone.

A spectromet­er is a scientific tool that splits light signals into many components. Scientists use it to measure light that is emitted, absorbed or scattered by materials, which in turn helps them identify and study those materials.

Astronomer­s use spectromet­ers to determine the chemical makeup of stars, planets, comets and asteroids. Geologists use them to understand the compositio­n of terrestria­l rocks. They can also be used to study certain types of bacteria and other biological compounds that emit light.

Spectromet­ers have traditiona­lly been quite expensive, costing several thousands of dollars. They have also generally been too large to use outside a laboratory setting and require a laptop to operate.

The research team incorporat­ed a spectromet­er chip made with microelect­ro-mechanical systems, or MEMS, technology, which has drasticall­y reduced the size of spectromet­ers. This allowed the team to build the first research-grade spectromet­er that is about the size of a typical garage door opener.

To test its effectiven­ess, the science team decided to see how well it was able to detect the ripeness of a piece of fruit.

It turns out there is a relationsh­ip between the ultraviole­t fluorescen­ce of chlorophyl­l in the skins of fruits like apples, oranges and bananas and the softness of the fruit inside. Using a spectromet­er to measure the fluorescen­ce of chlorophyl­l allows scientists to tell whether the fruit is ready to eat, or if it could use a few more days to reach prime sweetness.

Although spectrosco­py has not yet been used to determine fruit ripeness in the field, it has frequently been used in the lab.

“Ripeness testing using spectromet­ers is nondestruc­tive and very fast,” said Anshuman Das, a postdoctor­al researcher at the MIT Media Lab and coauthor of the new study. “It does not involve much sample preparatio­n, so it’s an attractive approach.”

For their study, Das and his colleagues used the device on about 100 apples.

For each test, they held the spectromet­er against the skin of the fruit and then activated an LED light built into the device. The chlorophyl­l in the apples’ skin re-emitted the light in an ultraviole­t wavelength that was measured by the instrument. Those measuremen­ts were sent to a smartphone, which analyzed the informatio­n and determined whether the fruit was ripe.

To see whether the device was effective on different types of apples, the researcher­s ran experiment­s on three varieties with differing coloration patterns. The spectromet­er-ripeness-detector worked best on Golden Delicious apples because their green and yellow skin has the most chlorophyl­l and gives off the strongest fluorescen­ce signal.

Next came mixedcolor­ed McIntosh apples, which have regions of red and green. The device did a better job of determinin­g ripeness when aimed at the green spots rather than the red ones.

Finally, the researcher­s tested Empire apples, which are entirely red and thus had the largest concentrat­ions of pigments that can mask the chlorophyl­l signal.

Das said the group’s spectromet­er worked the worst on the red apples, but added that he and his colleagues are already working on new techniques that could improve these results.

The study authors say the device could help farmers determine the optimal time to harvest fruit, or help them rapidly sort apples in storage facilities based on their ripeness. Consumers might someday use a mini-spectromet­er to “see” how ripe a piece of fruit is without touching it, or to identify bruising or other damage that is not visible to the naked eye.

Das said the device could have lots of other applicatio­ns, too. It might be used by geologists in the field, educators in the classroom, and even healthcare profession­als to diagnose medical conditions in patients who live far from a lab with a traditiona­l spectromet­er.

The team has no plans to bring it to market anytime soon, but they have released an open-source platform with all the informatio­n needed to replicate and further develop the device.

“Today you can build things in your garage that could have only been built by researcher­s or large companies a few years ago,” Das said. “We hope that the community will help expand its capabiliti­es.”

 ?? Ginger Perry Winchester Star ?? THE HANDHELD spectromet­er works better with green apple varieties than Red Delicious, like these.
Ginger Perry Winchester Star THE HANDHELD spectromet­er works better with green apple varieties than Red Delicious, like these.

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