SMELL TELEPORTATION: A NEW ERA OF TOUCH-ENABLED MOBILE COMMUNICATION
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55640/Keywords:
smell teleportation, sensory mobile communication, digital aroma, 5G, 6G, smell transmission, olfactory physiology.Abstract
The article discusses the current achievements and prospects of smell teleportation technologies in the context of the development of touch-based mobile communication. Special attention is paid to the physiological aspects of smell perception, technical solutions for digital fragrance transmission, and integration of these technologies with fifth-and sixth-generation mobile networks (5G/6G). The analysis of existing methods of synthesis and modulation of smell signals is carried out, as well as the challenges and prospects of introducing smell teleportation in everyday communication, education, medicine and entertainment industries are discussed.
Downloads
References
1.Dennler, N., Drix, D., Warner, T. P. A., et al. (2024). High-speed odour sensing using miniaturised electronic nose.
2.Aktas, D., Ortlek, B. E., Civas, M., et al. (2023). Odor-Based Molecular Communications: State-of-the-Art, Vision, Challenges, and Frontier Directions. Lee, H. R., Kim, K. S., & Min, H. J. (2024). Development of a Digital Olfactory Function Test: A Preliminary Study. Life, 14(1), 75.
3.Wen, T., Mo, Z., Li, J., et al. (2020). An Odor Labeling Convolutional Encoder-Decoder for Odor Sensing in Machine Olfaction.
4.Digital Olfaction Society. (2024). Advancing Olfactory Technology: New Graphene Sensors Redefining Scent Detection.
5.Borak, M. (2024). Smell the future: Machine olfaction is paving the way for digitizing odors. Biometric Update.
6.Mordor Intelligence. (2025). Digital Scent Market - Size, Share & Forecast, Trends (2025 - 2030). Mordor Intelligence
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors retain the copyright of their manuscripts, and all Open Access articles are disseminated under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC-BY), which licenses unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that the original work is appropriately cited. The use of general descriptive names, trade names, trademarks, and so forth in this publication, even if not specifically identified, does not imply that these names are not protected by the relevant laws and regulations.

Germany
United States of America
Italy
United Kingdom
France
Canada
Uzbekistan
Japan
Republic of Korea
Australia
Spain
Switzerland
Sweden
Netherlands
China
India