Take your VR setup to the next level with the power of smell

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Wearable odor generators enable olfactory feedback in VR. Credit: Xinge Yu
Wearable odor generators enable olfactory feedback in VR. Credit: Xinge Yu

Want to take your virtual reality (VR) setup to the next level? Researchers have created a small, wearable VR interface that allows users to smell several different odours — including rosemary, mojito, pancake, and durian. The devices can quickly and accurately generate odours in a localised area and connect wirelessly to VR worlds for an immersive and more realistic user experience. Future research could allow users to detect smells when playing video games, 4D films, and in virtual teaching environments, the researchers suggest.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Engineering: Smelling the flowers in virtual reality *IMAGES & VIDEOS*

A small, wearable virtual reality (VR) interface that allows users to smell several different odors — including rosemary, mojito, pancake, and durian — is reported in a Nature Communications paper. The devices can quickly and accurately generate odors in a localized area and connect wirelessly to VR worlds for an immersive and more realistic user experience. Future research could allow users to detect smells when playing video games, 4D films, and in virtual teaching environments, the authors suggest.

Human-machine interface systems have previously been developed to simulate vision, sound, and touch in VR, but designing a system for smell has been challenging. Current smell interface designs have bulky formats using bottles of liquid perfume or wired, rigid VR headsets that limit their practicality. Wearable odor generators that are lightweight, flexible, wireless, and equipped with a wide selection of odor types and programmable scent intensities have yet to be created.

Xinge Yu, Yuhang Li and colleagues designed two wearable formats of the wireless smelling interface. Using millimeter-scale odor generators, the first format is directly attached to the skin under the nose with two odor options, and the second is a soft mask capable of generating nine different odors. The authors demonstrate its customizability with a selection of 30 different odor types — including pineapple, ginger, green tea, caramel, and candy. The tiny odor generators contain scented paraffin wax, which can be heated to release specific odors quickly (in as little as 1.44 seconds) and accurately in a localised area.

The authors suggest several applications for the research, such as for delivering scent messages as an alternative communication method, triggering emotional memories, and enhancing user interaction in VR worlds.

Multimedia

Olfactory interfaces
Olfactory interfaces
This movie demonstrates the application of the Device 2 in a VR game
This movie demonstrates the application of the Device 1 in the 4D movie watching

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Research Springer Nature, Web page
Journal/
conference:
Nature Communications
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Funder: This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grants No. 62122002), City University of Hong Kong (Grants No. 9667221, 9678274, and 9680322), and the Research Grants Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (Grants No. 21210820, 11213721 and 11215722), in part by InnoHK Project on Project 2.2—AIbased 3D ultrasound imaging algorithm at Hong Kong Centre for Cerebro-Cardiovascular Health Engineering (COCHE). YH.L. acknowledges the funding from The Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province of China (No. LY21A020001), and Ningbo Scientific and Technological Innovation 2025 Major Project (No. 2021Z108). Q.G. acknowledges the funding from the Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province in China (Grant No. ZR2021MF008), the State Key Laboratory of Functional Materials for Informatics (Grant No. SKL202101).
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