“…[10] Some gas sensors in the market are designed as badges and are potentially analytically accumulative but require the observer to distinguish color and color intensities. [11,12] To alleviate the potential drawbacks of current wearable sensors requiring battery power (based, for example, on metal oxide semiconductors, [13][14][15][16][17] electrochemical, [18][19][20][21][22][23][24] infrared, [25][26][27] photoionization detectors, [28,29] lasers, [30][31][32] among others) or recognizing a colorimetric read-out, a next generation sensor platform should not require either. One or some forms of color vision deficiency (color blindness) affects about one in twelve men (> 8%) and one in 200 women, [33,34] and men are the majority among emergency responders, military personnel, and firefighters.…”