MUMBAI, India, Feb. 13 -- Intellectual Property India has published a patent application (202611000577 A) filed by Ct University, Ludhiana, Punjab, on Jan. 3, for 'smart handheld non-invasive device for real-time detection of water quality in sealed bottles.'
Inventor(s) include Dr. Satvir Singh; Dr. Nitin Tandon; Dr. Vaneet Kumar; and Ms. Nisha.
The application for the patent was published on Feb. 13, under issue no. 07/2026.
According to the abstract released by the Intellectual Property India: "The present invention is a clever, portable, non-invasive device in order to detect and analyze water quality in sealed bottles in real time without opening or polluting the container. To assess water purity characteristics such as microbiological presence, dissolved solids, pH variation, chemical adulterants, and hazardous pollutants, the gadget combines spectroscopic detection, electromagnetic field analysis, and artificial intelligence-based classification. To detect violations from recommended drinking water standards, spectral and physical data are recorded through bottle walls and processed using machine learning models that have been developed. Through an onboard indicator and companion application, the system offers instantaneous visual and digital findings. The concept reduces reliance on laboratory-based testing techniques, improves consumer safety, and permits authenticity verification of packaged water."
Disclaimer: Curated by HT Syndication.