Low-cost microfluidic sensors with smart hydrogel patterned arrays using electronic resistive channel sensing for readout

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Abstract

There is a strong commercial need for inexpensive point-of-use sensors for monitoring disease biomarkers or environmental contaminants in drinking water. Point-of-use sensors that employ smart polymer hydrogels as recognition elements can be tailored to detect almost any target analyte, but often suffer from long response times. Hence, we describe here a fabrication process that can be used to manufacture low-cost point-of-use hydrogel-based microfluidics sensors with short response times. In this process, mask-templated UV photopolymerization is used to produce arrays of smart hydrogel pillars inside sub-millimeter channels located upon microfluidics devices. When these pillars contact aqueous solutions containing a target analyte, they swell or shrink, thereby changing the resistance of the microfluidic channel to ionic current flow when a small bias voltage is applied to the system. Hence resistance measurements can be used to transduce hydrogel swelling changes into electrical signals. The only instrumentation required is a simple portable potentiostat that can be operated using a smartphone or a laptop, thus making the system suitable for point of use. Rapid hydrogel response rate is achieved by fabricating arrays of smart hydrogels that have large surface area-to-volume ratios.

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APA

Leu, H. Y., Farhoudi, N., Reiche, C. F., Körner, J., Mohanty, S., Solzbacher, F., & Magda, J. (2018). Low-cost microfluidic sensors with smart hydrogel patterned arrays using electronic resistive channel sensing for readout. Gels, 4(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/gels4040084

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