Technical Report—Applying Physics and Sensory Sciences to Spirits Nosing Vessel Design to Improve Evaluation Diagnostics and Drinking Enjoyment

Ethanol is the direct by-product of distillation. The vast majority of straight spirit beverages are bottled at 40%+ ABV (alcohol by volume). Aficionados, critics, spirits judges, and a significant percentage of drinkers choose to drink and evaluate spirits at bottled strength from traditional vessels. Olfactory perceptions are quickly compromised by abundant ethanol, numbing olfactory sensors and severely inhibiting aroma detection during evaluation. Traditional vessel redesigns have concentrated on minor styling changes, ignoring olfactory and physical sciences. Consumers’ continued search for value and quality and increased dependency on spirits competitions as a primary source of ratings emphasizes the need for a functional diagnostic vessel which displays and delivers aromas unobscured by ethanol olfactory numbing. The application of olfactory and physical science creates an engineered tasting vessel which eliminates severe ethanol olfactory numbing, optimizes aroma definition, and significantly improves diagnostics for those who evaluate, judge, rate, distill, and enjoy flavor nuances of spirits.


General Introduction and Importance
Published research is non-existent on the application of scientific principles to functional spirits drinking vessel design, largely due to an established mindset that the sole purpose of a drinking vessel is to deliver beverage from container to mouth. New drinking vessel concepts are initiated by glassware and beverage companies to increase sales or create a perceived style identity for a particular beverage. If scientific function holds marketing advantages, the desired science is invented or spun to fit, eventually creating general public misconceptions. Due to the lack of published scientific experimentation in a long-neglected field, the research herein is by necessity empirical or subjective, and was designed by the author and research team to: • discover preferences and effects of ethanol on accurate diagnostics and evaluation • examine validity of existing design assumptions through application of scientific principle • provide general direction for identification of vessel design parameters.
Olfactory receptor numbing by overexposure to ethanol vapor is a major hindrance to accuracy for all who evaluate spirits. Discussions of the background, state-of-the-art, and recurring issues of olfactory ethanol are organized as follows: 1. ethanol effects on the human olfactory system-Section 1.1;

1.
Causes pain to olfactory receptors especially in more sensitive noses.

3.
Inhalation introduces ethanol through pulmonary system to the bloodstream, leading to cognitive impairment.

4.
Ethanol has anesthetic consequences for any of the 636 different olfactory receptors, as estimated by Godfrey et al. [4]. Further research is needed to identify and quantify the extent of ethanol-receptor binding and the possible existence of vibrational harmonics across the many different receptor types to determine how many may be affected.
Avoiding or minimizing these effects can be achieved by engineering a vessel to separate ethanol aromas from other odorants emanating from the spirit and redirecting ethanol aromas away from the nose. Design objectives for the engineered spirits diagnostic vessel are: • wide aroma display to facilitate separation and detection of more aromas • avoidance of ethanol anesthesia by separating and diverting ethanol away from the nose.

Physical Properties of Ethanol
Ethanol is the most abundant molecule in a spirit's evaporated aromas and is the first to reach the olfactory bulb during sampling, as it is highly volatile, has high vapor pressure, and a low boiling point and surface tension. Although ethanol molar mass is over 2 times that of water, hydrogen bonding slows water evaporation, and ethanol is the most abundant molecule in the evaporation. Table 1. Ethanol inhibits aroma detectability and perception, yet is ignored for high% ABV spirits vessel design purposes and improvement of diagnostic methodologies. Section 1 defines the background, state-of-the-art, and problems related to olfactory ethanol, and Section 2 describes the methodology of the experimentation and develops the design parameters necessary to engineer the vessel to meet stated objectives.

State of the Art of Olfactory Science and Applicable Terminology
The "lock and key" theory proposed in 2004 by Buck and Axel [6] and the receptor-molecule fit and vibration theory proposed in 2006 by Turin [7] are currently considered mechanisms describing odorant molecule-to-receptor binding that takes place to present a signal to the brain for odor identification.
Recovery time is the timespan required for replacement mucous to flush traces of prior aroma molecules from the epithelium. The mucous replacement process is the same as that required for recovery from odor adaptation. Adaptation recovery time is measured by Steinmetz et al. [8] using methyl isobutyl ketone as a control, with 70% recovery occurring at about 200 s, or over 3 min. Ethanol, as the most abundant, is the first and most likely to cause olfactory adaptation.
Terms such as olfactory fatigue, odor fatigue, olfactory adaptation, sensory adaptation, and nose blindness are commonly used by evaluators to describe aroma detectability loss after prolonged sniff-sampling of wine, spirits, or perfumes. Whether due to olfactory adaptation or ethanol receptor binding, existing terminology does not adequately describe the molecule-receptor binding process, although common use of these terms tends to validate an ethanol anesthetic effect. The author hereby introduces terminology to specifically address ethanol-receptor binding:

•
Ethanol lockout is hereby defined as an ethanol molecule binding to a single receptor, thus removing that sensor from the detection process until unbinding occurs. • Ethanol anesthesia is hereby defined as the en masse ethanol lockout of an evaluator's olfactory receptors to an extent that impairs aroma detectability.
Ethanol anesthesia begins concurrently with ethanol adaptation, and as more receptors are locked out, the ability to smell and discern other aromas becomes more difficult as more abundant ethanol binds to receptors, leaving fewer to detect other aromas. Observations related to ethanol anesthesia are covered in detail in Section 1.8, as it is more easily discovered during panel evaluations.

Evaluation of Existing Common Spirits Vessels
Subjective panel evaluations of different vessels were conducted with several control spirits to determine which attributes were favorable or unfavorable to diagnostics ( Table 2). Results of this subjective evaluation were useful to provide design direction. Table 2. Comparison of best (green) and worst (red) nosing vessel attributes. Consensus of viability as a diagnostic vessel for three common vessel designs. Details in Section 2 Methods. The "lock and key" theory proposed in 2004 by Buck and Axel [6] and the receptor-molecule fit and vibration theory proposed in 2006 by Turin [7] are currently considered mechanisms describing odorant molecule-to-receptor binding that takes place to present a signal to the brain for odor identification.

Subjective Evaluation I: Existing Common Spirits Vessels
Recovery time is the timespan required for replacement mucous to flush traces of prior aroma molecules from the epithelium. The mucous replacement process is the same as that required for recovery from odor adaptation. Adaptation recovery time is measured by Steinmetz et al. [8] using methyl isobutyl ketone as a control, with 70% recovery occurring at about 200 s, or over 3 min. Ethanol, as the most abundant, is the first and most likely to cause olfactory adaptation.
Terms such as olfactory fatigue, odor fatigue, olfactory adaptation, sensory adaptation, and nose blindness are commonly used by evaluators to describe aroma detectability loss after prolonged sniffsampling of wine, spirits, or perfumes. Whether due to olfactory adaptation or ethanol receptor binding, existing terminology does not adequately describe the molecule-receptor binding process, although common use of these terms tends to validate an ethanol anesthetic effect. The author hereby introduces terminology to specifically address ethanol-receptor binding:


Ethanol lockout is hereby defined as an ethanol molecule binding to a single receptor, thus removing that sensor from the detection process until unbinding occurs.  Ethanol anesthesia is hereby defined as the en masse ethanol lockout of an evaluator's olfactory receptors to an extent that impairs aroma detectability.
Ethanol anesthesia begins concurrently with ethanol adaptation, and as more receptors are locked out, the ability to smell and discern other aromas becomes more difficult as more abundant ethanol binds to receptors, leaving fewer to detect other aromas. Observations related to ethanol anesthesia are covered in detail in Section 1.8, as it is more easily discovered during panel evaluations.

Evaluation of Existing Common Spirits Vessels
Subjective panel evaluations of different vessels were conducted with several control spirits to determine which attributes were favorable or unfavorable to diagnostics ( Table 2). Results of this subjective evaluation were useful to provide design direction. The "lock and key" theory proposed in 2004 by Buck and Axel [6] and the receptor-molecule fit and vibration theory proposed in 2006 by Turin [7] are currently considered mechanisms describing odorant molecule-to-receptor binding that takes place to present a signal to the brain for odor identification.
Recovery time is the timespan required for replacement mucous to flush traces of prior aroma molecules from the epithelium. The mucous replacement process is the same as that required for recovery from odor adaptation. Adaptation recovery time is measured by Steinmetz et al. [8] using methyl isobutyl ketone as a control, with 70% recovery occurring at about 200 s, or over 3 min. Ethanol, as the most abundant, is the first and most likely to cause olfactory adaptation.
Terms such as olfactory fatigue, odor fatigue, olfactory adaptation, sensory adaptation, and nose blindness are commonly used by evaluators to describe aroma detectability loss after prolonged sniffsampling of wine, spirits, or perfumes. Whether due to olfactory adaptation or ethanol receptor binding, existing terminology does not adequately describe the molecule-receptor binding process, although common use of these terms tends to validate an ethanol anesthetic effect. The author hereby introduces terminology to specifically address ethanol-receptor binding:


Ethanol lockout is hereby defined as an ethanol molecule binding to a single receptor, thus removing that sensor from the detection process until unbinding occurs.  Ethanol anesthesia is hereby defined as the en masse ethanol lockout of an evaluator's olfactory receptors to an extent that impairs aroma detectability.
Ethanol anesthesia begins concurrently with ethanol adaptation, and as more receptors are locked out, the ability to smell and discern other aromas becomes more difficult as more abundant ethanol binds to receptors, leaving fewer to detect other aromas. Observations related to ethanol anesthesia are covered in detail in Section 1.8, as it is more easily discovered during panel evaluations.

Evaluation of Existing Common Spirits Vessels
Subjective panel evaluations of different vessels were conducted with several control spirits to determine which attributes were favorable or unfavorable to diagnostics ( Table 2). Results of this subjective evaluation were useful to provide design direction. The "lock and key" theory proposed in 2004 by Buck and Axel [6] and the receptor-molecule fit and vibration theory proposed in 2006 by Turin [7] are currently considered mechanisms describing odorant molecule-to-receptor binding that takes place to present a signal to the brain for odor identification.
Recovery time is the timespan required for replacement mucous to flush traces of prior aroma molecules from the epithelium. The mucous replacement process is the same as that required for recovery from odor adaptation. Adaptation recovery time is measured by Steinmetz et al. [8] using methyl isobutyl ketone as a control, with 70% recovery occurring at about 200 s, or over 3 min. Ethanol, as the most abundant, is the first and most likely to cause olfactory adaptation.
Terms such as olfactory fatigue, odor fatigue, olfactory adaptation, sensory adaptation, and nose blindness are commonly used by evaluators to describe aroma detectability loss after prolonged sniffsampling of wine, spirits, or perfumes. Whether due to olfactory adaptation or ethanol receptor binding, existing terminology does not adequately describe the molecule-receptor binding process, although common use of these terms tends to validate an ethanol anesthetic effect. The author hereby introduces terminology to specifically address ethanol-receptor binding:


Ethanol lockout is hereby defined as an ethanol molecule binding to a single receptor, thus removing that sensor from the detection process until unbinding occurs.  Ethanol anesthesia is hereby defined as the en masse ethanol lockout of an evaluator's olfactory receptors to an extent that impairs aroma detectability.
Ethanol anesthesia begins concurrently with ethanol adaptation, and as more receptors are locked out, the ability to smell and discern other aromas becomes more difficult as more abundant ethanol binds to receptors, leaving fewer to detect other aromas. Observations related to ethanol anesthesia are covered in detail in Section 1.8, as it is more easily discovered during panel evaluations.

Evaluation of Existing Common Spirits Vessels
Subjective panel evaluations of different vessels were conducted with several control spirits to determine which attributes were favorable or unfavorable to diagnostics ( Table 2). Results of this subjective evaluation were useful to provide design direction. The most commonly used vessels are those of the traditional copita and tulip or chimney style vessels shown in the center column of Table 2. These dimensionally small-rim area, tall, narrow-bowl vessels inhibit objective evaluation, particularly during multiple sample evaluation sessions, due to high ethanol concentration. Performance of both of the vessels shown and other tulip and chimney shapes are equal, as their design characteristics and size are related, as shown in Figure 1.
A single engineered vessel which displays aromas and eliminates ethanol anesthesia is constructed in Section 2 Methods to overcome high concentration problems of traditional vessels.

Industry Application of Traditional Vessel Designs
Traditional vessels originated with the copita and also include more recent derivatives which share design features that prevent aroma display and concentrate anesthetic ethanol ( Figure 1).

Figure 1.
The copita becomes the chosen standard. The copita is a centuries-old trade tool for verifying quality by purchasing agents at loading piers and was nicknamed the "dock glass". Similar small rim diameters, tall rim heights, and narrow bowl diameters in later designs exemplify the reluctance of vessel manufacturers to stray from the established traditional and visual identity.
The rationale for adopting the copita as the standard tasting vessel is simple and unscientific:  it is highly visible as the standard sherry tasting vessel, merchants' quality verification tool, and has ready availability, public familiarity and acceptability;  it was designed for higher ABV beverages, 22% vs. 12% ABV for wine, with smaller vessels more effectively controlling overindulgence than larger-sized vessels;  it holds a 45 mL spirits serving, the common bar serving, while providing a small headspace, which is considered to be important for collecting and detecting aromas.
Vessel manufacturers' restyling attempts within the last four decades have maintained the recognizable design features of the copita-style vessel, perpetuating the dependency on traditional identification for public acceptability over function, such as:


small rim diameters restricting the nose from entering the vessel and concentrating ethanol;  convergent, vertical or nearly vertical sidewalls, which concentrate ethanol;  bowl diameters too small to accommodate swirling and the attendant tall headspaces;  vessel rim heights too tall to detect some large-mass aromas.
Technical discussion of these flawed design parameters is covered in Section 2, to directly relate drawbacks to the parameters necessary to construct the engineered vessel.
Vessel shape's effect on aroma is not a new concept, beginning with the notable introduction of large air volume wine glass by Riedel in 1958 to promote quick oxidation of red wines. Our extensive research discovered no published scientific research on spirits vessel design.

Scotch Blenders Support Traditional Vessel Designs
Scotch distillers and blenders have entrenched the copita as the accepted spirts tasting vessel despite noted design flaws. The best-selling spirits are blends of different age or flavor characteristics Figure 1. The copita becomes the chosen standard. The copita is a centuries-old trade tool for verifying quality by purchasing agents at loading piers and was nicknamed the "dock glass". Similar small rim diameters, tall rim heights, and narrow bowl diameters in later designs exemplify the reluctance of vessel manufacturers to stray from the established traditional and visual identity.
A single engineered vessel which displays aromas and eliminates ethanol anesthesia is constructed in Section 2 Methods to overcome high concentration problems of traditional vessels.

Industry Application of Traditional Vessel Designs
Traditional vessels originated with the copita and also include more recent derivatives which share design features that prevent aroma display and concentrate anesthetic ethanol ( Figure 1).
The rationale for adopting the copita as the standard tasting vessel is simple and unscientific: • it is highly visible as the standard sherry tasting vessel, merchants' quality verification tool, and has ready availability, public familiarity and acceptability; • it was designed for higher ABV beverages, 22% vs. 12% ABV for wine, with smaller vessels more effectively controlling overindulgence than larger-sized vessels; • it holds a 45 mL spirits serving, the common bar serving, while providing a small headspace, which is considered to be important for collecting and detecting aromas.
Vessel manufacturers' restyling attempts within the last four decades have maintained the recognizable design features of the copita-style vessel, perpetuating the dependency on traditional identification for public acceptability over function, such as: • small rim diameters restricting the nose from entering the vessel and concentrating ethanol; • convergent, vertical or nearly vertical sidewalls, which concentrate ethanol; • bowl diameters too small to accommodate swirling and the attendant tall headspaces; • vessel rim heights too tall to detect some large-mass aromas.
Technical discussion of these flawed design parameters is covered in Section 2, to directly relate drawbacks to the parameters necessary to construct the engineered vessel.
Vessel shape's effect on aroma is not a new concept, beginning with the notable introduction of large air volume wine glass by Riedel in 1958 to promote quick oxidation of red wines. Our extensive research discovered no published scientific research on spirits vessel design.

Scotch Blenders Support Traditional Vessel Designs
Scotch distillers and blenders have entrenched the copita as the accepted spirts tasting vessel despite noted design flaws. The best-selling spirits are blends of different age or flavor characteristics to achieve tastier expressions. Blending is difficult due to exposure to olfactory ethanol, unless care is taken to keep the effects of olfactory ethanol in check.
Recognizing that the copita focuses high ethanol concentrations at the nose, blenders have long attempted to control nose burn by diluting spirits with water to 20% ABV. This dilution coincides with ethanol levels for which the sherry copita was best suited, as sherry is 18-22% ABV, and with dilution the copita has become the accepted standard blenders tool for scotch whisky. Dilution of blending spirits to approximately half their original strength with water confirms that olfactory ethanol effects have long been recognized by the industry as a significant problem for spirits evaluation. Dilution reduces olfactory and palate pain. However, dilution at 1:1 ratio creates other problems. Diluting to 20% ABV ignores consumer drinking habits and changes aroma profiles:

•
Bottled at 40%+ ABV, dilution of 1 serving with an equal amount of water yields 20% ABV. Consumers drink spirits straight at bottle strength, undiluted. • 50% dilution forms a continuum mixture of ethanol and water, releasing some compound micelles while masking others. According to Conner et al. [9], Lersch [10] and Karlsson et al. [11], this degree of dilution frees long-chain fruity esters and masks short chains, smoky phenols, and oily, soapy, grassy, nutty, and cereal aromas, altering the aroma profile to one not experienced by consumers who drink straight spirits.
As acknowledged by blenders and distillers, 50% dilution persists as the blending standard. Tradition has precluded consideration of an alternative vessel to eliminate ethanol anesthesia, improve ortho-nasal diagnostics, or to relate blending to consumers' straight drinking preferences.

Attempts to Alleviate Ethanol Anesthesia with Traditional Vessels
Experts, critics, brand ambassadors and other marketers have developed methods and altered tasting procedures to reduce prevalent olfactory ethanol effects and preserve traditional vessels. The most common are underlined, and have proven short-sighted for reasons provided in italics:

•
Breathe through mouth and nose simultaneously to avoid inhaling nose-numbing ethanol.
Alleviates initial olfactory pain but delivers smaller air-diluted samples, affecting aroma detection. Ethanol concentration remains high, occupying more olfactory receptors with each consecutive sniff. • Do not swirl. Swirling is the "engine" that propels evaporation. No swirling yields much less evaporation and fewer aromas to evaluate. Swirling is discussed in Section 2.1.

•
Waft. Place vessel 15-20 cm from the nose, slightly below nostril level, wave aromas over the top of the glass toward nose to avoid pain and numbing. Wafting acclimates the olfactory receptors to prevent initial pungency of concentrated ethanol, ethanol lockout continues during sniffing. • "Shake hands". Position the glass about one foot away from the nose while sniffing, subsequently repositioning successively closer while sniffing, until rim is directly under nostrils. Gradual acclimation avoids initial nose burn but does not avoid lockout when sampling from small-rim diameter vessels. Ethanol vapor concentration remains at same high levels during sampling.

•
Add water to open up aroma. Water raises liquid surface tension shutting down evaporation of all aromas, including those important to identification and evaluation. "Opening up" is the perception of relief occurring due to less pungent ethanol on the olfactory receptors.
These methods attempt to relieve numbing in traditional vessels, but only soften the initial sensation as the olfactory receptor acclimates. Blenders mix their spirits to their own satisfaction, and only they are privy to altered aroma profiles created by high dilution. The effects of water on aroma profile are ignored by blenders, and Karlsson [12] agrees that although his research places micelles close to the surface of the liquid, surface tension is a major restriction to the evaporative process.
An engineered vessel which diverts ethanol from the nose eliminates the need for acclimation to pungent, nose-numbing ethanol of high % ABV spirits, and relates to consumer preferences.

Erroneous Design Assumptions Hinder Vessel Development
Scientific development of spirits vessels has been hindered by several misleading yet common assumptions gathered by the author and research team from discussions with vessel manufacturers and spirits industry brand ambassadors, presented herein to explain the prevalent mindset and attitude toward a scientific approach to vessel design and application. Each assumption is underlined, directly followed by its fallacy in italics:

•
Ethanol cannot be separated from other aromas. Scientific rationale for separation has existed since 1848 with Graham's Law: Until now, Graham's Law has not been applied to aroma separation.

•
Convergent sides and small rim diameters are necessary to collect and concentrate aromas under the nose so none escape detection. Perhaps logical at first take, the most abundant molecule is ethanol with an attendant anesthetic effect. Convergent rims fail to focus aromas, and concentrate ethanol in a "cloud" which obscures and masks aromas at the rim where nosing occurs, forcing the evaluator to "pick and sort" through the cloud to find definable character aromas.

•
Swirling releases nose-numbing ethanol, do not swirl. Swirling is necessary to create sufficient aromas for sampling, as many are obscured by the pungency of abundant ethanol. Proven with wine, swirling spirits is the "engine" that releases evaporation, transferring aromas to the nose. • Tall, thin vessels focus aromas. Height restricts higher mass molecules from reaching vessel rims and detection. Lower vessel heights improve likelihood of higher mass aroma delivery. Gravity has some effect on aroma detection in tall, open container vessels.
These assumptions are explored in more detail in Section 2.2, as they are proven to be misconceptions through methodical vessel engineering.

Gender Preferences and Mindset Regarding Ethanol Aroma in Spirits
The research team conducted side-by-side consumer vessel comparison tests, sample size n ≈ 2914, in 2011-2015, performed at spirits events with participating attendees and which clearly demonstrate that 13% of polled male spirits drinkers believe ethanol is an important component of spirit aroma while less than 2% of females prefer ethanol. Repeatability across events and over nearly five years validates the results. The total results by gender are described in Table 3. Table 3. Male vs. female preferences for ethanol aroma (% by gender). Participants at spirits events were randomly invited to sniff sample the same spirit in a traditional vessel versus the engineered vessel, in a side-by-side comparison without suggestive comment. Spirits varied by event and control spirit choice did not affect participants' preference for ethanol. 13% of the tested male population preferred ethanol in the aromas, as did 2% of the females tested. Approximately 30% of females asked to participate declined because they did not want to smell straight spirits. Study details are presented in Section 2 Methods.  Female olfactory sensitivity is significantly greater than male. Olivera-Pinto et al. [13], using an isotropic fractionator to count olfactory sensors post-mortem, determined that women have a 43% better sensor count than men. The large difference between male and female preference for ethanol aroma in Table 3 supports significantly higher female sensitivity to olfactory ethanol.

Female Prefer Ethanol
A vessel designed to alleviate olfactory ethanol anesthesia and pain improves participation of more sensitive noses, and could tend to balance gender weighting among straight spirits drinkers.

The Importance of Ortho-Nasal Aroma Detection in Spirits Evaluation
During evaluation, two different paths of aroma detection deliver different perceptions, ortho-nasal and retro-nasal, and both are subject to ethanol lockout and therefore ethanol anesthesia.
Ortho-nasal smell occurs through nostrils to the anterior of the olfactory bulb and olfactory nerve without palate or mouthfeel sensor input. Ortho-nasal detection is the first exposure and tone-setter for spirits flavor and: 1.
assures the evaluator prior to tasting that no known aromas are poisonous or harmful, changing the evaluator's mindset from trepidation "Is it safe to taste?" to relaxed and curious investigation "What do I smell?" "Can I recognize it?" "Do I like it?". 2.
previews the aroma set to create anticipation of retro-nasal evaluation, "I smell orange on the nose, I will seek it in the finish". Aroma memories have an effect on perception through disposition to particular aromas. Predispositions are well-known to panel administrators, who disallow conversation during primary evaluation, forcing reliance on individual diagnostic perception to capture first impressions without external suggestive influence.
Ortho-nasal perception is discounted by Carmer's C-STEM method [14], which introduces spirit into the oral cavity first without ortho-nasal sampling, and evaluating from retro-nasal experience only. C-STEM provides a method to avoid ethanol anesthesia by eliminating aroma manipulation of the vessel entirely and eliminating ortho-nasal contact with ethanol aroma.
Subjective evaluations clearly demonstrate that C-STEM consistently and repeatedly yields fewer detectable aromas than traditional sampling which utilizes both ortho-nasal and retro-nasal Table 4. The difference is probably attributable to the importance of ortho-nasal tone-setters 1 and 2 described in the previous paragraph. Although C-STEM is effective in decreasing the probability of ethanol anesthesia by eliminating the ortho-nasal component, it does so at the expense of a well-defined aroma profile by eliminating recognizable aromas, and is not a preferable solution. As in Section 1.4, another attempt to alleviate ethanol anesthesia by manipulation of procedure or evaluation method is adversely consequential to performing high quality diagnostics. Table 4. Aroma detection comparison. Using a copita vessel, C-STEM evaluations were performed first to eliminate ortho-nasal contributions. Thirty-minute pause, followed by traditional evaluation performed with each control spirit. Testing repeated and verified. Conclusion: Ortho-nasal evaluation may provide a useful benefit to accurate evaluation. Details in Section 2.1 Methods.

Control Spirit
Traditional Evaluation (Ortho-Nasal + Retro-Nasal) C-STEM Evaluation (Retro-Nasal Only) Since there is a lack of evaluation methods which provide viable solutions to observed ethanol anesthesia, vessel design must be explored. Retro-nasal contribution to ethanol anesthesia cannot be controlled, but ortho-nasal ethanol can be diverted through engineered vessel design.

Role of Flavor in Vessel Design
Flavor is the combination of smell, taste, and mouth-feel transmitted to the brain's orbital frontal insula and piriform cortex regions for identification or registration. Five basic tastes are attributable to taste buds: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami. Other receptors present throughout the oral cavity affect flavor and mouthfeel such as minty, cool, tannins, hot pepper, metallic, oily, grainy, other textures, temperatures, and chemical receptors are present from lips to gut. The human olfactory can discriminate at least 636 different aromas, according to Godfrey, Buck et al. [4].
Flavor has been described as 90% aroma, 10% taste and mouthfeel. Spence [15] estimates from 75 to 95% aroma contribution to flavor. Food flavors are more diverse than spirits, and the case is hereby made for a 90% aroma contribution to flavor with spirits. With only 5 tastes and significantly fewer mouth-feels and other flavor contributors for spirits versus food, a 90% weighting of aroma for spirits flavor is deemed representative. At 75%, aroma contributes significantly to flavor.
Put simply, one does not taste raspberries, one tastes sweet, 5%, smells raspberry, 90%, and feels the fuzzy fruit and light acids in the mouth, 5%. Signals from the palate and flavor receptors travel through the mandibular nerve, and olfactory and upper oral cavity receptors from the maxillary nerve, along with sight from the ophthalmic nerve combine in a single inseparable information packet transferred to memory for recognition, identification or cataloging. Visual and emotional influences are notable components of evaluation, but must be disregarded, as they relate to personal and individual experiences and are unquantifiable and uncontrollable by known methods. Olfactory perception is the major contributor to flavor.
Engineered vessels which divert ethanol improve detectability and accurately present spirits quality unencumbered by anesthetics. The 90% contribution of aromas to spirit flavor emphasizes the need to control ethanol lockout and anesthesia to prolong evaluator effectiveness and display all available aromas for detection.

Ethanol Effects during Multi-Sample Judging and Evaluation
Competitions offer unique observation opportunities for simultaneous comparison of evaluators notes, ratings, and variances, and examination of procedures which are key to identifying ethanol anesthesia and improving diagnostic vessel design.
For distillers, competitions are key to quick validation and a cost-effective alternative to traditional advertising. Competitions have developed into profitable businesses, vying to become the consumers' chief source of tasting notes, awards, and ratings. Successful competitions amass large numbers of entrants, and time management is imperative to cost control. Eight or more flights per day with 6-12 samples are common, and evaluators are pushed to judge quickly, with greater risk of ethanol anesthesia.

Observed Ethanol Anesthesia
Ethanol anesthesia is easily detected during panel judging, yet the exact point of onset is difficult to determine. Examination of judges' tasting notes and observations of interactive conversations during judging provide early indications of ethanol anesthesia with traditional vessels and flights of 5 or more samples. During the third flight, written tasting notes frequently lack critical detail.
Near the end of the third flight, many judges have expressed difficulties in recalling descriptive words, and some comment on unrecognizable aromas, note fewer aromas, or describe aroma availability as "tight". Time allotted between individual sample evaluations in a single flight is generally much less than Steinmetz' [8] lower end of range recovery time of 3 min. The results of 4 events with copita vessels conducted by the Arsilica Inc. research team are shown in Table 5. Table 5. Aroma sensitivity during successive blind panel evaluations (aromas/samples). Panel evaluation events with copita vessels. Number of aromas is the sum total of different aromas collected from individual notes. Brown, barrel-aged spirits generally display significantly more aromas than clear. In all events, during the third flight, fewer brown spirit aromas were noted than from clear spirits in prior flights. Audible comments regarding aroma detectability began early during the third flight for each event. Red denotes fewer identified aromas than the previous flight despite a more aroma-laden category. Conversations with evaluators using traditional vessels indicate awareness of difficulty during the third flight of an event. Details in Section 2 Methods. Initially appearing as mild intoxication, this is not the case, as evaluators sample less than 22 mL of spirit per sample, spit excess, dump post-sampling residuals, and refrain from swallowing. If lack of attention to key aromas is not due to intoxication, the most probable explanation is the onset of ethanol anesthesia preventing aroma detection. Post-break notes exhibit a return to specifics.
Direct acknowledgments of ethanol anesthesia are few during actual events, either due to reluctance to admit dysfunction, pressure on timely completion, or because evaluators are unaware of their quickly degrading sense of smell. Ethanol anesthesia appears in multiple evaluators simultaneously. Precise point of onset is difficult to establish, but compromised samples would include all in the flight and perhaps some prior, leaving many entrants with flawed evaluations. This research clearly needs additional experimentation to identify precise onset and validate ethanol anesthesia as the suspected issue or discover other possible causes for desensitization.

Collective Ethanol Anesthesia may be a Potential Cause of Competition Event Ratings Disparities
Case Study: A gin distiller, awarded a double gold medal from a prestigious competition, chose to seek an additional medal the following year. The gin was sample 2 of 5 in the second flight for the first competition, and sample 5 of 8 in flight 3 for the second competition, evaluated by 4 judges, it received no recognition. Two evaluators had rated the gin in both competitions. Alerted of the disparity, administrators chose to override judges' opinions and award a gold medal. Probable conclusion: Numerous prior samples may have imparted ethanol anesthesia.
As a consultant to spirits competitions, the author and research team has closely observed and personally monitored over 40 events gathering data on tasting methods and procedures, noting frequent disparities in year-over-year rankings of the same spirit. Some administrators quickly identify anomalies during the event and correct by encouraging evaluators to adjust to panel peers, and some adjust ratings post-event prior to publication to avoid criticism.
The importance of competition ratings as a reliable consumer reference demands precautions to protect integrity, provide entrants with equal opportunity to receive recognition, and provide consumers with accurate information.
This research presents the case for standardization of an engineered evaluation vessel for all spirits across competitions. Regardless of a spirit's specific material source for ethanol-grain, fruit, agave, cane, or other-coping with ethanol anesthesia is the major hindrance to effective diagnostics and evaluation whether for individual tasting or competition settings.
A functional, standardized vessel levels the playing field for entrants, contributes to ratings comparability across competitions, and improves evaluation quality. A vessel which diverts olfactory ethanol unmasks subtle aromas, improves character aroma detection, alleviates ethanol anesthesia and prolongs evaluator effectiveness in fast-moving competitions. Over 100 competition events using the engineered vessel over 6 years have reported no instances of ethanol anesthesia or aroma detection difficulties (See Supplementary Website S1).

Regarding All Experiments, Tests, and Subjective Evaluations
Validity: Subjective Evaluations I, II, and III of small sample size utilized qualified panelists chosen for their olfactory abilities established the design direction to optimize aroma display and minimize ethanol aroma.
Panelist Qualifications: Panelists chosen for all evaluations except Consumer Test I are persons well-known to the author to have extensive experience in wine and spirits evaluation either as industry executives, avid collectors or aficionados, spirits judges, accomplished mixologists, well trained brand ambassadors, knowledgeable spirits distributors and buyers, sommeliers with a level or degree of certification, tastings and competition organizers or administrators, key peer-respected members of prestigious international spirits clubs, or professional associations. Unless otherwise noted, test panels consisted of 8 selected from a pool of 23 who possess one or more of the above-listed qualifications.

Consumer Test I Participants Were All Random Attendees at Spirits Events
Reliance upon Human Sensory Subjective Evaluations: Spirits diagnostics lacks testing equipment with acceptable correlation to human sensory perception and testing and evaluations continue to rely upon subjective human sensory opinion and taste, which differs depending on the personal experiences of panelists. For this reason, all subjective testing cited must be regarded as directional pending greater sample size studies or suitable equipment to replace human evaluators. The Glencairn, copita and engineered vessel are designed to hold 45 mL, approximately 1 common retail serving at their best fill at maximum bowl diameter. Unless otherwise noted, all experiments were performed with 45 mL spirit in each vessel, including snifter and tumbler.

Subjective Evaluation I: Existing Common Spirits Vessels
• Purpose: Identify and quantify favorable and unfavorable olfactory characteristics due to design and/or shape aspects of nosing and tasting spirits in each of three vessels commonly used in evaluations, particularly regarding the presence of detectable ethanol aroma.
• Objective: To identify existing design factors of common evaluation vessels which contribute or detract from objective spirits evaluation due to olfactory ethanol. • Materials: Vessels for each evaluation shown in Figure 2: Control spirits of bourbon, scotch, aged rum, reposado tequila, VSOP cognac, gin, vodka, 45 mL per sample.
procedures and enforce the ten-minute time limit per trial. Immediately after individual evaluation completion, notes were collected and panelists were assembled to discuss vessel shape characteristics affecting results. One evaluation consisted of one control spirit, four evaluation vessels sampled in order in anticipation of the effect of shape on induced ethanol anesthesia: tumbler, Glencairn, copita, and snifter. All vessels were covered to prevent ambient aroma mixing and all remained covered except sample being evaluated. Participants were instructed not to swirl, then uncover, smell, recover, and evaluate; then to repeat with swirling for each vessel, noting: 1. estimated percentage of ethanol vs. other aromas before and after swirling. 2. rank vessels in order of lowest to highest ethanol detection.

Figure 2.
Testing vessels utilized in all experimentation.
Additionally, ease of swirling was ranked 1-5 for each vessel, 1 being easiest to swirl. (2) Glencairn and copita exhibit identical issues with aroma detection, i.e., high ethanol concentration, swirling difficulty; (3) snifter vessel promotes ethanol over character aromas by creating an ethanol dominant aroma mixture impeding specific aroma detection. Vessel rank from lowest to highest ethanol was unanimous: tumbler best, snifter second, and Glencairn and copita last, but equal. Swirling is best in snifter, then tumbler, with Glencairn and copita last, but equal. Trial repeats verified results for each vessel with each control spirit. • Conditions: Ambient temperature 24-25 • C, isolated room, free from abnormal noise and distraction, well ventilated and free from perceptible air currents. • Methodology: Subjective evaluation by experienced panelists to assess and estimate ethanol contribution to aroma profiles of various common vessels. These tests are qualitative opinions conducted for experienced internal design direction only. • Procedure: Maximum of three control spirit evaluations were held in a single day, and multiple evaluations were spaced at least 30 min apart to ensure complete olfactory recovery from aroma adaptation prior to subsequent trials. Repeat trials with the same control spirit were performed on different days. Two trials were performed for each control spirit. No taste sampling of spirits was allowed during olfactory evaluations, or between multiple evaluations. Brands, bottles and labels of control spirits were hidden from panelists to avoid familiarity influencing outcome. Each panelist evaluation was individually secluded and monitored to ensure adherence to procedures and enforce the ten-minute time limit per trial. Immediately after individual evaluation completion, notes were collected and panelists were assembled to discuss vessel shape characteristics affecting results. One evaluation consisted of one control spirit, four evaluation vessels sampled in order in anticipation of the effect of shape on induced ethanol anesthesia: tumbler, Glencairn, copita, and snifter. All vessels were covered to prevent ambient aroma mixing and all remained covered except sample being evaluated. Participants were instructed not to swirl, then uncover, smell, recover, and evaluate; then to repeat with swirling for each vessel, noting:

Results and Conclusions (
1. estimated percentage of ethanol vs. other aromas before and after swirling. 2.
rank vessels in order of lowest to highest ethanol detection.
Additionally, ease of swirling was ranked 1-5 for each vessel, 1 being easiest to swirl. Vessel rank from lowest to highest ethanol was unanimous: tumbler best, snifter second, and Glencairn and copita last, but equal. Swirling is best in snifter, then tumbler, with Glencairn and copita last, but equal. Trial repeats verified results for each vessel with each control spirit.

Consumer Test I: Male vs. Female Preferences for Ethanol Aroma
• Purpose: Determine preference for ethanol in the aromas of spirits from two different vessels, a prototype of the subject engineered vessel which dissipates ethanol aroma and a standard tulip vessel which concentrates ethanol. • Objective: To test market the radical design and appearance of the engineered vessel against the widely accepted industry standard vessel and to discover ethanol aroma preferences of men and women who drink spirits "neat", without water, ice or mixer. • Materials: Standardized vessels used for each evaluation: (1) standard copita, and (2) engineered vessel. Control spirits were always bottled at 40% ABV; bourbons, scotch, rums, blanco and reposado tequilas and gins, 45 mL per sample, approximately a standard single serving which is design capacity or "best fill" for all vessels. Early experimentation from Table 2, Consumer Test I exhibited no difference in ethanol perception between copita and Glencairn, and Glencairn was used in many subsequent trials due to familiarity with event attendees. For reference, (c) denotes copita and (g) Glencairn in Table 2. Additionally, there were no differences in perceptive ethanol for 40% ABV spirits of different origin, grain, fruit, sugarcane, or agave. Control spirits were donated by spirits manufacturers attending the events. • Conditions: Ambient temperature 24-26 • C, large auditoriums, exhibit halls, and hotel ballroom suites, crowded and noisy. • Background: Over a span of nearly five years, Arsilica, Inc. researchers attended spirits industry tradeshows to present a version of the well-known "Pepsi Challenge" at random to those who agreed to participate. Multiple challenges with as many as three stations were employed at several events. • Methodology: AB consumer discrimination testing. Real-world setting with naïve, random, non-screened spirits event attendees with an interest in tasting spirits, no incentives to participate were offered. • Procedure: No taste sampling of spirits allowed, evaluation was restricted to olfactory. All samples remained covered between samplings. Control spirits bottles and brands were visible to participants. Each participant was asked to first swirl and sniff the engineered glass sample keeping nose at the rim plane holding glass level, then to sniff the tulip glass. This order ensured that strong, higher velocity sniffs of concentrated ethanol did not numb noses prior to detecting aromas from the engineered glass. Challenge station moderators asked which was preferred and reasons for choosing, and responses were recorded by gender. Further questioning was directed to males who preferred the tulip aromas with strong ethanol to discover reasons for their preference. • Results ( Table 3): The total number of recorded trials is 2914. Of the males who participated, approximately 13% preferred ethanol on the nose, standard deviation 2.23%, and less than 2% of females preferred ethanol on the nose, standard deviation 1.37%, both with 2σ and 95% confidence level confirming previous assertions that women are more sensitive to pungent concentrated ethanol aroma. Further questions were asked of those males who preferred ethanol in the aroma to determine mindset. Results of these questions uncovered a particular attitude among male spirits drinkers, which is noteworthy and should inspire additional research to determine reasons for preference of ethanol. Polled participants attended events for the purpose of sampling straight spirits offerings from distillers or distributors and were familiar with drinking spirits straight, neat, no ice, water, or mixer.

1.
How old are you? Two-thirds of polled males preferring ethanol aroma are over age 45, suggesting a cultural difference toward ethanol for younger males. Unfortunately, the importance of this question was lost on the research team, and ages were not recorded for the entire polled population.

2.
When do you generally drink straight spirits? Most common responses were: with friends and acquaintances, "guys night out", happy hour after work, bachelor and birthday parties, watching sports, and other male gender-specific activities. Many commented that females seldom attended spirits drinking group activities. 3.
The mindset of males who preferred ethanol is summarized in comments after sniffing the engineered vessel. Of the 13% of males who preferred ethanol aroma, many insisted that the engineered vessel must contain a lower-quality spirit and 63% of those commented that higher presence of ethanol indicated higher quality. Of males preferring ethanol, just over a third considered themselves above average in knowledge of their favorite spirits. Additionally, the 13% of males preferring ethanol disliked the engineered vessel for the most common reasons in order of frequency (1) "I use the Glencairn"; (2) "There is no aroma"; and (3) "...it looks like a flower vase or spittoon or goldfish bowl". Preference and intent to follow the vessel identified with and supported by industry was well apparent in the responses of the majority of the 13% of males who preferred ethanol aromas.
Not all subsequent questions were exactly the same and were asked by monitors as attitudinal probes into casual conversation without structure, as the single-minded objective was to determine ethanol preference by gender. For this reason, comments reported in items 1, 2, and 3 are indications subject to further research for substantiation, and are included to note potential difficulties of changing straight spirits drinkers' mindsets.

•
Conclusions: The vast majority of participants preferred no ethanol on the nose, and most of those that preferred ethanol had opinions that ethanol belongs in the aroma of spirits. The vast majority of females preferred no ethanol, supporting the referenced study that females have more sensitive noses than males.

Subjective Evaluation II: Methods Comparison-Traditional vs. C-STEM
• Purpose: Compare spirits aroma detectability of retro-nasal spirits evaluation only versus traditional evaluation which includes both ortho-nasal and retro-nasal sampling. • Objective: To determine if retro-nasal CSTEM evaluation method provides as much aroma information as long-held method which utilizes ortho-nasal first, then retro-nasal evaluation sometimes called "finish". • Materials: Copita used for all evaluations, with control spirits of bourbon whiskey, scotch whisky, and gin, all 40% ABV. Aged and botanical spirits demonstrate higher aroma availability for evaluation, and unaged spirits and vodka were not considered. Second trial set using same scotch sample was a repeat of first trial set.

3.
Gin: a. First trial set. C-STEM method-the total number of different aromas detected by all panelists from gin sample was 3: ethanol, juniper, and licorice. Traditional method yielded 2 additional aromas of floral and lemon or citrus. b.
Second trial set. C-STEM method-the total number of different aromas detected by all panelists from same gin sample was 3: ethanol juniper, and licorice or cardamom. Traditional method yielded 2 additional aromas of spice and floral.
All three control spirits displayed more detectable aromas using the traditional method versus the C-STEM method. Although C-STEM alleviates ethanol anesthesia, there are fewer unique aromas detected in the total aroma profile.
• Conclusion: C-STEM is not an acceptable evaluation method to alleviate ethanol anesthesia during evaluation diagnostics, due to unsatisfactory aroma detection most likely caused by elimination of ortho-nasal component of evaluation.

Simulation I: Aroma Sensitivity during Successive Panel Evaluations
• Purpose: Determine the point at which ethanol anesthesia begins to affect spirits competition judges' ability to evaluate and rate spirits through simulation of a competition event with a tulip style vessel. Four flights prior to a long break could confidently provide the necessary number of evaluations to induce ethanol anesthesia as its approximate point of occurrence as determined from discovery and event experience, and a single flight post break is sufficient to ensure olfactory recovery from aroma adaptation. Although many competitions may have more than one flight of vodkas and gins per panel, whiskeys were purposely set for flights three and four to provide spirits with more inherently available aromas to detect during a time frame in which suspected ethanol anesthesia occurs in actual competitions. Judges differed for each event, but were the same for all flights of a specific event. Judges were instructed to maintain silence and note each and all aromas on their score sheets from both ortho-nasal and retro-nasal traditional evaluation, which were then removed from the tables when all judges had completed notation to prevent post-evaluation changes or additions. As in actual competition, judges were allowed to resample, discuss and assign mock award levels based on the commonly used system of double gold, gold, silver, bronze, and no award, prior to bussing and resetting for next flight. Performing this procedure accurately simulated actual competition timing. Judges were instructed to spit after sampling and dump residual spirits. Monitors ensured adherence to spit and dump procedures to prevent possibility of intoxication during evaluations.

Subjective Evaluation III: Aromas Detected in Bourbon as a Function of Distance
• Purpose: Determine spirit aroma detectability as a function of nostril distance from liquid surface. • Objective: Establish the maximum height from the liquid surface to the nostril at which one can detect the highest unique aroma count. • Background: General assumptions of ideal gas behavior and random molecular motion in a closed system is frequently and mistakenly applied to an open system. In an open system, molecules are continually leaving the container to be replaced by those evaporating at the liquid surface. Gravitational effect on molecular mass and complex molecular shape are commonly acknowledged as the reasons that more aromas are detectable closer to the liquid surface. • Materials: The tumbler pictured in Figure 2 was used with various fill levels to achieve different evaluation heights. The tumbler was chosen as the test vessel as being large enough to minimize vessel manipulation of ethanol and aroma profiles. Control spirits of bourbon, scotch, tequila, gin, cognac, aged unspiced rum, and vodka. • Conditions: Ambient temperature 24-25 • C, isolated room, free from abnormal noise and distraction, well lit, well ventilated, yet free from perceptible air currents. • Methodology: Monitored individual spirits evaluation in laboratory conditions by experienced evaluators to determine a critical design dimension for aroma detectability. • Methods and Procedures: Eight panelists for each trial were each supplied with a single tumbler control vessel, marked with a vertical masking tape level indicator to denote liquid fill levels for surface to rim plane heights of 7, 5, 3, 2.5, 2, and 1 cm. Panelists were instructed and monitored to sniff and note aromas with vessel flat on the table, positioning nostril opening at the rim plane. Panelists were allowed to relocate nostrils to different horizontal positions within the rim plane, maintaining same vertical proximity to the spirit level. When evaluation at a single level was complete, the vessel was filled to the next level and test sniffing repeated, until the level reached 1 cm below the rim plane. Level evaluations were spaced every 10 min to ensure recovery from possible aroma adaptation. Liquid was stirred at each level to generate evaporation. Data was recorded on the same page in successive columns left to right in decreasing surface to rim plane heights. Aromas recorded from previous fills remained on the data sheet for reference. Each control spirit was evaluated twice in separate trials and repeatability was verified.
• Results ( Table 6): The table denotes aromas detected from the single bourbon control spirit trial for all panelists, and specifies additional unique aromas noted at each successive fill for each panelist. Bourbon, scotch, anejo tequila, aged unspiced rum, and cognac all required a maximum of 2.5 cm to detect all available aromas. For vodka, all aromas, that is no additional aromas were detectable below 5 cm. Table 6.
New aromas detected in bourbon as nose moves closer to liquid surface. Determined empirically, 2.5 cm is the maximum critical distance for complete aroma detection. Fluid levels were adjusted to decrease distance between liquid surface and rim plane in a large graduated tumbler. Panelists recorded new smells detected at each level. Tests were repeated with different control spirits yielding similar results. The control spirit shown is a common 40% ABV bourbon. See Section 2, Methods. Distances above 2.5 cm significantly affect aroma detectability. • Conclusion: Subjective evaluation reveals that nostril height from surface of the liquid is important to detecting aged spirit aromas, and 2.5 cm is sufficient rim height for diagnostic evaluation. Larger mass aromas become more detectable as nostrils approach liquid surface. See Table 7 for molecular mass of many aromas. Molecular mass affects aroma detectability. Detectability by molecular shape is beyond the scope of this evaluation but may be important.
Other chemical properties such as vapor pressure, hydrophobicity and solubility are important as well but will not be addressed here.

A Scientific Approach to Vessel Design and Dimensions
Systematic examination of vessel dimensions for state-of-the-art physical science and sensory considerations provides directional dimensional definition and functional improvement. Each key dimension plays a functional role in ethanol separation and ethanol anesthesia prevention. Ergonomics is also a major consideration when establishing dimensions to preserve vessel utility.
Aromas have been traditionally considered as a homogeneous gas, physically inseparable into its various molecular components. At the molecular level, aroma is a heterogeneous and separable mix of many different homogeneous gases. Separability redefines the aroma mixture in spirits evaporation as a heterogeneous gas. An orifice and expansion chamber provide the means and a path for ethanol separation through diffusion as described by Graham's law, which has been applied as the initial means of separating 235 U from 238 U, contributing to the success of the Manhattan Project.

Vessel Bowl Diameter Ergonomics and Improving Swirling
Bowl diameter must be large enough to permit high swirling velocities and larger wetted areas, significantly improving evaporation, yet not too large to handle ergonomically. Arsilica, Inc. (Las Vegas, NV, USA) ergonomic evaluation studies determined a maximum diameter of ≈80 mm achieves best swirling, or largest bowl diameter without holding and handling issues.
Swirling breaks surface tension enhancing evaporation. Large bowl diameters increase wetted sidewall area and improve evaporation through these different means: • after swirling, downward flow of fluid on vessel sidewall results in "legs" or tears" caused by the surface tension gradient between cohesive water and ethanol, disrupting surface tension and improving evaporation as they tend to separate, known as the Gibbs-Marangoni effect. • gravity creates vertical shear on vertical vessel sides, disrupting surface tension and improving evaporation as liquid returns to the liquid pool. • thin wetted liquid layers on the vessel sidewalls create a quick, short path for rebounding molecules to break surface tension, improving evaporation; whereas the large volume of a liquid pool tends to absorb the motion of molecules rather rebounding to test surface tension.
Evaporation from thin fluid layers on vessel sidewalls is greater than at the pooled liquid/air interface. Increased sidewall area by increasing vessel diameter enables higher swirl velocities. Higher velocities increase liquid/air interface pressure differential, evaporation layer thickness, and horizontal liquid shear breaks surface tension, analogous to faster pool water evaporation on a windy day. Thus, larger bowls improve aroma availability when swirling. Table 7. Diffusion rates of many aromas of distillate compounds. Comparing two of the mixed gasses, highlighted in yellow; CIS-3-Methyl-4-octanolide, mol mass 264.26 gm/mole, and ethanol, mol mass 46.07 gm/mole, the lactone rate of diffusion is 42% of ethanol, slowest to diffuse, and detected near center rim plane. Ethanol diffuses fastest and is the most abundant molecule detectable at the vessel rim lip. Slowly sniffing at the rim plane confirms aroma positions.

Vessel Height
Spirits are a mixture of 40%+ ABV, and water and traces of compounds which carry aromas and flavor. Ethanol has a higher vapor pressure, and lower surface tension and boiling point than water (Table 1), and evaporated ethanol concentration is much higher than evaporated water due to molecular hydrogen bonding, despite water's lower molecular mass. Experiment: observe two identical vessels, one filled with water, one with spirit to the same level; twelve hours later, liquid level is highest in the water vessel.
As opposed to the random motion assumed in a closed system, in an open system, molecular motion is an upward flow, with aromas moving to the vessel rim and dispersing, replaced by more evaporating molecules below. Molecules of complex shape and higher mass frequently drop back into the liquid without reaching the rim, with detectability correlating with vessel rim height from the evaporation surface of the liquid Figure 3. Experiment: place 10 mL of whisky in a 100 mL laboratory-graduated cylinder and smell, noting detectable aromas beginning with ethanol. Add new aromas to the list as they are detected during subsequent additions of whisky in 20 mL increments. Note that more aromas become detectable as liquid level rises to the rim proximity where the nose is placed to detect new aromas. Also see Subjective Evaluation III and Table 6. Ethanol concentration of total aroma increases as nostril position moves higher above the liquid surface. Short vessels improve heavier complex molecule detection. The majority of spirit aromas available are detectable when the distance between liquid surface and rim or maximum concentration plane is under 2.5 cm Table 6.

Convergent Rim vs. Divergent Rim
Convergent rim is defined as vessel sides that converge, creating a rim plane area smaller than the maximum bowl plane area. Convergent rims compress rising flow of aromas. Divergent vessels have larger horizontal rim plane areas, allowing molecules to disperse freely upon evaporation and escape, controlled by rim angle and vessel side length (ramp) (Figure 4).

Synergy of Combining Both Configurations Separates Ethanol
Combining both designs and adding a restriction provides an orifice to separate ethanol and character aroma molecules. Restriction increases molecular collisions and divides vessel into two chambers: 1. lower, below the restriction, is the evaporation chamber, in which evaporated aromas are encouraged to vaporize by swirling to wet vessel side walls. 2. upper, above the restriction, is the expansion chamber, controls dispersion and diffusion of molecules compressed in the neck and directs expanded higher velocity ethanol molecules over Ethanol concentration of total aroma increases as nostril position moves higher above the liquid surface. Short vessels improve heavier complex molecule detection. The majority of spirit aromas available are detectable when the distance between liquid surface and rim or maximum concentration plane is under 2.5 cm Table 6.

Convergent Rim vs. Divergent Rim
Convergent rim is defined as vessel sides that converge, creating a rim plane area smaller than the maximum bowl plane area. Convergent rims compress rising flow of aromas. Divergent vessels have larger horizontal rim plane areas, allowing molecules to disperse freely upon evaporation and escape, controlled by rim angle and vessel side length (ramp) (Figure 4).  . Small convergent rims contribute to ethanol anesthesia. Note "cloud" shapes over vessel rims. Extensive experimentation by Mitsubayashi et al. [16], using an infrared "sniffer-camera" to photograph ethanol cloud shapes created by different vessel shapes through a catalytic coated mesh validates the ethanol evaporation patterns shown. Prior to Mitsubayashi, cloud shapes could not be imaged, since infrared does not detect ethanol. Previous cloud "boundaries" were empirically determined by careful nosing. . Small convergent rims contribute to ethanol anesthesia. Note "cloud" shapes over vessel rims. Extensive experimentation by Mitsubayashi et al. [16], using an infrared "sniffer-camera" to photograph ethanol cloud shapes created by different vessel shapes through a catalytic coated mesh validates the ethanol evaporation patterns shown. Prior to Mitsubayashi, cloud shapes could not be imaged, since infrared does not detect ethanol. Previous cloud "boundaries" were empirically determined by careful nosing.

Synergy of Combining Both Configurations Separates Ethanol
Combining both designs and adding a restriction provides an orifice to separate ethanol and character aroma molecules. Restriction increases molecular collisions and divides vessel into two chambers: lower, below the restriction, is the evaporation chamber, in which evaporated aromas are encouraged to vaporize by swirling to wet vessel side walls. 2.
upper, above the restriction, is the expansion chamber, controls dispersion and diffusion of molecules compressed in the neck and directs expanded higher velocity ethanol molecules over the rim and away from the nose. The straight, linear lip from neck to rim defines a volume bounded by the orifice and rim planes, and provides an unobstructed, controlled escape path and expansion volume for diffused molecules ( Figure 5).

Figure 4.
Small convergent rims contribute to ethanol anesthesia. Note "cloud" shapes over vessel rims. Extensive experimentation by Mitsubayashi et al. [16], using an infrared "sniffer-camera" to photograph ethanol cloud shapes created by different vessel shapes through a catalytic coated mesh validates the ethanol evaporation patterns shown. Prior to Mitsubayashi, cloud shapes could not be imaged, since infrared does not detect ethanol. Previous cloud "boundaries" were empirically determined by careful nosing.

Figure 5.
Advantages of combining two shapes. Large convergent vessel bowl improves swirling evaporation, ensuring that more aromas reach the orifice or neck, to be diffused by the divergent expansion chamber. Orifice height of the engineered vessel is well below 2.5 cm.

Application of Gas Kinetic Theory and Graham's Law
Applying gas kinetic theory explains the ethanol separation process: 1. Convergent sides concentrate molecules increasing collisions and small molecule velocities. From the kinetic energy equation:
Particle velocity is inversely proportional to the square root of its mass. Convergent bowl increases molecular flux and impingement rate at the orifice, imparting higher velocities to lower mass molecules, especially lowest mass and highly abundant ethanol. 2. Divergent sides allow dissipation. Applying Graham's law to compare diffusion rates of two gas components, the equation becomes: Substituting an arbitrary diffusion Rate2 = 1.00, and a molar mass of 46.07, to represent ethanol, the aroma diffusion rates of other aroma molecules are calculated as a percentage of the fastest diffuser, ethanol (1.00).

Application of Gas Kinetic Theory and Graham's Law
Applying gas kinetic theory explains the ethanol separation process:

1.
Convergent sides concentrate molecules increasing collisions and small molecule velocities. From the kinetic energy equation: Particle velocity is inversely proportional to the square root of its mass. Convergent bowl increases molecular flux and impingement rate at the orifice, imparting higher velocities to lower mass molecules, especially lowest mass and highly abundant ethanol.

2.
Divergent sides allow dissipation. Applying Graham's law to compare diffusion rates of two gas components, the equation becomes: Substituting an arbitrary diffusion Rate 2 = 1.00, and a molar mass of 46.07, to represent ethanol, the aroma diffusion rates of other aroma molecules are calculated as a percentage of the fastest diffuser, ethanol (1.00).
Diffusion rates serve to approximate their detection positions in the rim plane. Quick inhalation and external air currents can disrupt position. Diffusion progresses upwards above the rim plane and outward from the central axis toward the rim in order of descending mass (Table 7).
Larger rims improve detection over convergent rims, which display character aromas in an ethanol cloud ( Figure 6). Ethanol falls to the ground away from the nose as it travels over the rim in a static atmosphere, as air = 29 g/mol, ethanol = 46 g/mol. Larger rims improve detection over convergent rims, which display character aromas in an ethanol cloud ( Figure 6). Ethanol falls to the ground away from the nose as it travels over the rim in a static atmosphere, as air = 29 g/mol, ethanol = 46 g/mol. Larger rim circumference provides a triple ethanol dilution factor, π, significantly decreasing propensity for ethanol anesthesia and distinctly displaying aromas from center to rim. Different spirits = different Larger rim circumference provides a triple ethanol dilution factor, π, significantly decreasing propensity for ethanol anesthesia and distinctly displaying aromas from center to rim. Different spirits = different aromas. Using GCMS spikes as identifiers, approximate detection positions of lower concentrated aromas including unaged clear spirits may be calculated.

Ethanol Path after Separation
Abundant ethanol must have space to occupy if it is to be diverted. Linearly straight, angled expansion chamber sides control exit path and provide expansion volume and a convenient reference location at rim to position nostrils near the vessel central axis as a starting point.

Lip Angle
To provide adequate expansion volume for diffusion and diversion of separated ethanol molecules, lip angle must be sufficiently large. A 40 • outward angle creates adequate expansion for 40% ABV spirits. No difference in aroma was detected by reducing angle from a theoretically ideal 45 • to 40 • , yet aroma display was compromised at 35 • , due to incomplete ethanol separation, compromising aroma definition. Angles greater than 45 • perform similarly to a rim edge termination as attendant outward angles increase. Spills increase as lip edge is angled outward, introducing an awkwardness similar to drinking from a saucer.

Nose Position
A standard position for nostril placement provides a fixed reference point to begin evaluation. Beginning evaluation with nose placed in a location of least ethanol exposure contributes to ethanol lockout avoidance. Place lips on vessel rim and tilt nose forward to the central axis-rim plane intersect (Figure 7). Average adult central maxillary incisor length and attending physiological measurements triangulate to establish diameter to 79-80 mm (Table 8). Placing lips on the rim of traditional vessels positions nostrils at or beyond the opposite vessel rim. aromas. Using GCMS spikes as identifiers, approximate detection positions of lower concentrated aromas including unaged clear spirits may be calculated.

Ethanol Path after Separation
Abundant ethanol must have space to occupy if it is to be diverted. Linearly straight, angled expansion chamber sides control exit path and provide expansion volume and a convenient reference location at rim to position nostrils near the vessel central axis as a starting point.

Lip Angle
To provide adequate expansion volume for diffusion and diversion of separated ethanol molecules, lip angle must be sufficiently large. A 40° outward angle creates adequate expansion for 40% ABV spirits. No difference in aroma was detected by reducing angle from a theoretically ideal 45° to 40°, yet aroma display was compromised at 35°, due to incomplete ethanol separation, compromising aroma definition. Angles greater than 45° perform similarly to a rim edge termination as attendant outward angles increase. Spills increase as lip edge is angled outward, introducing an awkwardness similar to drinking from a saucer.

Nose Position
A standard position for nostril placement provides a fixed reference point to begin evaluation. Beginning evaluation with nose placed in a location of least ethanol exposure contributes to ethanol lockout avoidance. Place lips on vessel rim and tilt nose forward to the central axis-rim plane intersect (Figure 7). Average adult central maxillary incisor length and attending physiological measurements triangulate to establish diameter to 79-80 mm (Table 8). Placing lips on the rim of traditional vessels positions nostrils at or beyond the opposite vessel rim.

Source of Data
Avg. Length (mm) Adult permanent maxillary central incisor length (7 sources) 23.5 Skull nasal opening to incisor root end (5 sources) 7

Sizing the Orifice
Sizing involves olfactory evaluation of different orifice area sizes to permit discernable ethanol separation and sufficient cross-sectional area to provide: • smooth, gradual unobstructed flow from expansion chamber into orifice • flow compression to increase molecular collisions raising lower mass particle velocities • quick ethanol expansion, diffusion and controlled escape • wide character aroma display inside the rim away from ethanol dispersion.
Evaluation with the wide aroma spectrum of different control spirits determined that orifice area reduction is most effective at 40%, for complete ethanol expansion and separation. Sizing rim diameter to 79 mm, slightly smaller than the 80 mm. maximum bowl diameter, and applying 40 • lip angle results in a best orifice size of 51 mm.
Positioning the orifice below the rim lowers effective height between liquid surface and orifice plane where maximum aroma concentration occurs, to 2.5 cm, increasing certainty of detecting higher mass character aromas as shown (Figure 3).

Shape Curve
The most efficient shape curve is determined by: • maximizing evaporation area of liquid surface at lower fluid levels during drinking by maintaining large bowl diameters at lower fluid levels in fill portion of evaporation chamber; • permitting aromas to flow smoothly and uninterrupted into the orifice; • sidewall curvature to facilitate swirling without spilling; • providing uninterrupted ethanol flow along divergent surface to rim in expansion chamber.

Vessel Volume
Vessel maximum design capacity is 45 mL when filled to maximum bowl diameter, which is also the common pour in bars and restaurants for straight spirit servings. Higher fill reduces evaporation volume and impedes swirling. For evaluation, 14 mL provides sufficient sample to swirl and evaluate with no difference in aroma detection. A 20 mL fill provides adequate detection insurance.

Dimensions and Shape of the Engineered Vessel
Combining all engineered design parameters renders the vessel shape and dimensions described in Figures 8 and 9.
volume and impedes swirling. For evaluation, 14 mL provides sufficient sample to swirl and evaluate with no difference in aroma detection. A 20 mL fill provides adequate detection insurance.

Dimensions and Shape of the Engineered Vessel
Combining all engineered design parameters renders the vessel shape and dimensions described in Figures 8 and 9.

Manufacturing Dimensions of Subject Engineered Vessel
The engineered vessel is currently being produced in Europe, with dimensions as noted in Figure 9. The manufacturing process is machine blow-molded in Europe from European Union standard crystalline.

Recommended Vessel Usage and Nosing Procedure
11. Record notes, replace cover, return later and re-evaluate to verify or expand description; 12. Do not add water to spirits as all aromas will shut down from increased surface tension. The vessel adequately redirects ethanol to prevent nose pain or ethanol anesthesia. If palate pain is an issue, pour spirit into a separate vessel to add water to oral preference, and continue to sample original for olfactory diagnostics only.

Results of Testing:
Subjective Evaluation I, also described in Table 2 and Section 2.1, enumerates the advantages and disadvantages of the three most common shapes of vessels used to evaluate spirits by the public and competitions: the tumbler, the tulip shape, and the snifter. None of the three design shapes were created with consideration for ethanol anesthesia. Tulip shapes have long been set forth as the industry standard, at least in the Scotch whisky industry, for identity purposes, and diagnosticians and other spirits industry segments have followed their lead for lack of a functional vessel or scientific knowledge regarding the effectiveness of commonly utilized tulip shape vessels.
Consumer Test I, also described in Table 3 and Section 2.1, demonstrates conclusively that female noses are more sensitive to highly concentrated ethanol. Subsequent questioning reveals a mindset regarding the 13% of males that prefer ethanol on the nose, that widespread acceptance of tulip shaped vessels is completely ingrained into the public mindset; in the opinion of the author, this attitude cannot be changed without focused re-education regarding the science applied herein.
Subjective Evaluation II, also described in Table 4 and Section 2.1, validates the ortho-nasal olfactory as necessary to the diagnostic and evaluation process, emphasizing the need to use an external means, e.g., vessel design, to avoid ethanol anesthesia without compromising aroma profile.
Simulation I, recreating four competition events in laboratory conditions reported in Table 5 and Section 2.1, verifies that overexposure to ethanol using tulip shape vessels without sufficient recovery times is likely, and the occurrences of ethanol anesthesia verified the results predicted from initial discovery interviews and researchers, competition experience. However, the precise onset of ethanol anesthesia could not be determined. Diagnostic results, ratings, and rewards in competitions become unreliable, placing some entrants at a disadvantage if the problem of ethanol anesthesia in competitions is not dealt with by either choice of judging vessel or more frequent break times to allow aroma adaptation recovery. Common tulip vessels conclusively contribute to ethanol anesthesia and therefore adversely affect judging and ratings reliability, especially when compared to field experiences which cite no occurrences of ethanol anesthesia with the engineered vessel. Subjective Evaluation III, described in Table 6 and Section 2.1, demonstrates that nostril distance from spirit surface affects number of detectable character aromas and establishes a distance of 2.5 cm maximum for complex aroma aged spirits. Detectable aromas are enhanced by vessels which allow nostril positioning closer to liquid surface, and shorter vessels improve aroma detection.
Subjective Evaluations I, II, and III are necessary to the total design process and represent subjective, yet educated, experienced judgment necessary to narrow design choices; they do not represent public opinion, and should not be held to the exact rigors of experimental procedure.
Consumer Test I, on the other hand, is composed of a disciplined testing methodology, indicative of public opinion and confirms a major aversion to olfactory ethanol in both genders, particularly the female gender, and exposes a mindset of male neat spirits drinkers that should be better explored through disciplined research techniques.

Projected Impact and Benefits of Results
Application of gas behavior, olfactory science and attention to ergonomics is a positive step toward resolving the established need for an engineered nosing vessel which presents and displays aromas for evaluation and reduces occurrences of olfactory ethanol anesthesia. The engineered vessel also positively addresses the following points: 1.
largely diminishing occurrences of ethanol anesthesia for evaluators, blenders, distillers, and consumers through use of an improved diagnostic vessel; 2.
providing wider, more efficient display of character aromas, desirable and undesirable to improve evaluation accuracy, diagnostics and rating, unencumbered by ethanol; 3.
improving competition aroma detection by widening aroma display area; 4.
eventually, awareness may raise the industry quality bar and consumer quality expectations by exposing aromas of distilling faults, as well as desirable aromas masked by ethanol; 5.
creating a viable candidate for diagnostic vessel standardization to improve industry quality, allowing distillers, evaluators, and consumers to establish a uniform evaluation baseline across industry segments; 6.
improving spirits marketing to include more sensitive noses and more female consumers to enjoy straight spirits without olfactory ethanol; 7.
providing a useful tool to distillers to improve accuracy of head and tail cuts; 8.
providing a useful tool for other aroma and scent applications such as perfumes, coffee, tea, olive oil, distilled flavor infusions and food flavor enhancers; 9.
improving consumers' ability to assess spirits for purchase, collection, and consumption; 10. enhancing drinking enjoyment and displaying subtle nuances of distilled spirits, especially for noses sensitive to the painful effects of concentrated ethanol.

Discussion
Awareness of ethanol anesthesia effects with traditional vessels is longstanding. Physical scientific knowledge applied herein has been in existence for well over a century, and relevant olfactory science for well over two decades. Adopting a standard engineered vessel provides the opportunity to improve education, align marketing perspectives to include basic science, and raise spirits quality while supporting consumer knowledge and enhancing tasting and nosing appreciation of straight spirits. Relying on science achieves functional design, opening the glassware and spirits industries to embrace progress and growth.
The author and research team are continuing to explore the evaluation process for further improvement and is exploring vessels which enhance enjoyment and evaluation of beers and wines as well as building on spirits research to design meaningful, repeatable testing to pinpoint ethanol anesthesia onset, through reliable data gathered from competition judging panels and carefully constructed scientific experimentation rather than subjective evaluation.

Conclusions
Historically, vessels have been looked upon solely as a device to transfer beverage from container to mouth, and design has not focused upon scientific principles, nor dealt with abundant nose-numbing ethanol as a marketing and styling take preference. The copita and its derivatives are examples of misplaced priorities, by placing traditional vessel marketing identity ahead of scientific observation and functionality.
Physical science and ergonomic design considerations have resulted in a functionally engineered vessel which has become the established judging vessel in most major US spirits competitions over the last six years, successfully used in well over 100 judging events and has won numerous design awards. Engineered vessel popularity as a diagnostic tool is due to its acceptance as a positive contribution to competition judging, significant reduction of ethanol anesthesia, ability to display subtle spirit aromas for improved detectability, and improvement and enhancement of spirits drinking enjoyment. In addition, the development of the engineered vessel has contributed to: • an awareness of ethanol anesthesia as a potential problem to competent evaluation, and the need for further research to quantify onset, exposure times and causal factors;