Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Mobile
  4. News

With a built-in molecular spectrometer, this phone can identify any material

Add as a preferred source on Google

What if you could flash your phone over anything –a banana, a pill, or even a piece of plastic– and instantly know its chemical composition? It sounds like the stuff of science fiction, but thanks to a new partnership between Asian electronics manufacturer Changhong and israel startup Consumer Physics. The Changhong H2 is an eight-core phone with an extra large six-inch screen and built in spectrometer.

Spectrometers work by sending out a pulse of near-infrared light that causes materials in an object to vibrate. From the returned light, the exact material composition of an object can be obtained. The company first debuted similar technology in 2014, which it plans to launch in the form of a handheld called the Scio sometime in 2017 for $249.

Recommended Videos

The H2 is essentially the same thing but built into a smartphone. The device will also launch this year, however, immediate details on exact availability and pricing have not been announced. Regardless, it almost feels like the idea of the tricorder from Star Trek is ever closer to reality.

There are several different possible uses for this type of technology. Athletes could use it to scan themselves to figure out body fat percentage, while concerned individuals could use it to scan for the nutritional content in food and drink. Even another compelling use could be to scan objects to verify authenticity — preventing you from purchasing a rip-off.

“Just as the smartphone put the power of the internet and a vast knowledge base into our pockets, this innovation will put the capability to learn about the chemical and molecular makeup of materials into the public’s hands,” Consumer Physics CEO Dror Sharon says. “This is the next leap forward not just for mobile phones, but for all sorts of connected devices. The Changhong H2 and smartphones are only the beginning.”

On its own end, Changhong says it is committing to the development of a wide series of applications for the H2, as well as assisting third-party developers in creating their own. A software development kit is planned for later in 2017, according to a statement. The H2 is the culmination of about a year’s work with Consumer Physics as well as semiconductor manufacturer ADI to shrink the Scio molecular sensor into something that could fit inside a smartphone.

While the H2 will provide powerful functionality that is so far unique to the device, Changhong says power efficiency was a key focus for developers. At launch, the H2 will be about 20 percent more power efficient than regular smartphones.

Ed Oswald
For fifteen years, Ed has written about the latest and greatest in gadgets and technology trends. At Digital Trends, he's…
This new chip stacking technique could be the key to unlocking faster AI performance
Researchers solved the fragile chip stacking problem holding AI memory back, and the results are significant.
ai-chip-image

Every time you use ChatGPT or generate an image with AI, there is a memory chip working at extreme speed behind the scenes. However, that chip has a memory bottleneck problem, and a Korean research team may have just solved it.

Researchers at POSTECH (Pohang University of Science and Technology) developed a new way to stack more than 10 ultrathin semiconductor chips on top of each other, achieving a memory density roughly four times higher than the best commercial chips available today (via TechXplore).

Read more
ChatGPT can now finish what you started, and that’s a much bigger deal than it sounds
Man using ChatGPT on a laptop

Just a few minutes after unveiling its new GPT-5.6 family — Sol, Terra, and Luna — OpenAI is back with another announcement. This time, it's introducing ChatGPT Work, a new AI agent designed to do more than answer questions. Instead of helping with one task at a time, it can take on entire projects that span multiple apps, documents, and services.

If you've ever spent an afternoon jumping between different apps just to finish a single assignment, ChatGPT Work is trying to eliminate that back-and-forth. The idea is to describe the end goal and figure out the steps in between.

Read more
If you’ve grown tired of babysitting ChatGPT, the new GPT-5.6 models might be the fix
open ai logo on mac

OpenAI seems to have a new AI model waiting in the wings every few months, and today is no different. The company has officially unveiled the GPT-5.6 family, bringing three new models to ChatGPT, Codex, and its API. The big star of the show is GPT-5.6 Sol, but it's joined by Terra and Luna, which are designed to deliver strong performance at a lower cost.

The days of endless follow-up prompts may be numbered

Read more