Small chemical sensors are subjected to adsorption-desorption fluctuations
which usually considered as noise contaminating useful signal. Based on
temporal properties of this noise, it is shown that it can be made useful if
proper processed. Namely, the signal, which characterizes the total amount of
adsorbed analyte, should be subjected to a kind of amplitude discrimination (or
level crossing discrimination) with certain threshold. When the amount is equal
or above the threshold, the result of discrimination is standard dc signal,
otherwise it is zero. Analytes are applied at low concentration: the mean
adsorbed amount is below the threshold. The threshold is achieved from time to
time thanking to the fluctuations. The signal after discrimination is averaged
over a time window and used as the output of the whole device. Selectivity of
this device is compared with that of its primary adsorbing sites, based on
explicit description of the threshold-crossing statistics. It is concluded that
the whole sensor may have much better selectivity than do its individual
adsorbing sites.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 2 table