학술논문

VibMilk: Nonintrusive Milk Spoilage Detection via Smartphone Vibration
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Internet of Things Journal IEEE Internet Things J. Internet of Things Journal, IEEE. 11(10):17184-17197 May, 2024
Subject
Computing and Processing
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Dairy products
Vibrations
Microorganisms
Liquids
Proteins
Internet of Things
Fats
Food safety
liquid testing
milk spoilage
neural networks
nonintrusive sensing
smartphone
vibration
Language
ISSN
2327-4662
2372-2541
Abstract
Quantifying the chemical process of milk spoilage is challenging due to the need for bulky, expensive equipment that is not user friendly for milk producers or customers. This lack of a convenient and accurate milk spoilage detection system can cause two significant issues. First, people who consume spoiled milk may experience serious health problems. Second, milk manufacturers typically provide a “best before” date to indicate freshness, but this date only shows the highest quality of the milk, not the last day it can be safely consumed, leading to significant milk waste. A practical and efficient solution to this problem is proposed in this article: a vibration-based milk spoilage detection method called $VibMilk$ that utilizes the ubiquitous vibration motor and inertial measurement unit (IMU) of off-the-shelf smartphones. The method detects spoilage based on the fact that the milk’s physical properties change, inducing different vibration responses at various stages of degradation. Using the InceptionTime deep learning model, $VibMilk$ achieves 98.35% accuracy in detecting milk spoilage across 23 different stages, from fresh (pH = 6.6) to fully spoiled (pH = 4.4).