App Tells You When Your Breath Stinks

The 'Mint' measures users' halitosis-inducing compounds
By Jenn Gidman,  Newser Staff
Posted Jan 7, 2015 7:00 PM CST
App Tells You When Your Breath Stinks
Bad breath? There's an app for that—or soon will be.   (Shutterstock)

Sticking a sensor into your mouth to calculate your hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen disulfide, and methyl mercaptan levels may sound at first like something you'd see in a sci-fi movie or in NASA astronaut training, but it's actually designed for a more practical, everyday purpose: to measure how bad your breath is. The Mint is a smartphone app that works similarly to creator Breathometer's alcohol-detecting smartphone breathalyzers, gauging how much of the aforementioned compounds (all prime halitosis suspects) is present, as well as how much water is in your mouth's mucous membrane, Mashable reports. A user places the Mint sensor in his mouth and breathes onto it; Mashable's Karissa Bell says the entire process took about 12 seconds.

The unit then measures the amount of volatile sulfur compounds (VSCs) congregating in the user's kisser and tells him whether he needs a mint and/or a glass of water, since dehydration is also a bad-breath inducer, according to the Mint's Indiegogo page. The folks behind the app, which has already crowdsourced more than $27,000 in funds as of this post, won a spot on Shark Tank in 2013 to pitch their original Breathometer device, which measures BAC. The "early bird" price for backers of Mint—scheduled for release in August to work with iPhone 5 or newer phones, as well as the Samsung Galaxy S4, Samsung Galaxy S5, and Nexus 5—is listed as $89 on Indiegogo. (Here's why you get garlic breath.)

Get the news faster.
Tap to install our app.
X
Install the Newser News app
in two easy steps:
1. Tap in your navigation bar.
2. Tap to Add to Home Screen.

X