1,595 research outputs found

    Surface Plasmon Resonance for Biosensing

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    The rise of photonics technologies has driven an extremely fast evolution in biosensing applications. Such rapid progress has created a gap of understanding and insight capability in the general public about advanced sensing systems that have been made progressively available by these new technologies. Thus, there is currently a clear need for moving the meaning of some keywords, such as plasmonic, into the daily vocabulary of a general audience with a reasonable degree of education. The selection of the scientific works reported in this book is carefully balanced between reviews and research papers and has the purpose of presenting a set of applications and case studies sufficiently broad enough to enlighten the reader attention toward the great potential of plasmonic biosensing and the great impact that can be expected in the near future for supporting disease screening and stratification

    Electronic noses for environmental monitoring applications

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    Electronic nose applications in environmental monitoring are nowadays of great interest, because of the instruments’ proven capability of recognizing and discriminating between a variety of different gases and odors using just a small number of sensors. Such applications in the environmental field include analysis of parameters relating to environmental quality, process control, and verification of efficiency of odor control systems. This article reviews the findings of recent scientific studies in this field, with particular focus on the abovementioned applications. In general, these studies prove that electronic noses are mostly suitable for the different applications reported, especially if the instruments are specifically developed and fine-tuned. As a general rule, literature studies also discuss the critical aspects connected with the different possible uses, as well as research regarding the development of effective solutions. However, currently the main limit to the diffusion of electronic noses as environmental monitoring tools is their complexity and the lack of specific regulation for their standardization, as their use entails a large number of degrees of freedom, regarding for instance the training and the data processing procedures

    Use of MOS Gas Sensors with Temperature Modulation-Specified Detection Point for Potential Identification of Soil Status Using Electronic-Nose Principle

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    13301甲第4410号博士(学術)金沢大学博士論文本文Full 以下に掲載:Sensors & Transducers 186(3) pp.93-103 2015. IFSA Publishing, S. L. 共著者:Arief Sudarmaji, Akio Kitagaw

    Novel gas sensors and electronic noses for optical, electrical and hybrid sensing: development, properties and applications

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    Smell is one of the most important senses of man. It is used in everyday life, influencing our behaviour. Evaluation of the quality of food and beverages or the production control in industries that require specialised personnel, are some examples of its use. The Electronic Nose mimics the human nose, through the transduction of a chemical interaction between a sensitive layer and the volatile compounds, generating a measurable signal. Conducting polymers, doped with dodecylbenzenesulfonic acid, employed in electrical gas sensors and in an electronic nose showed their applicability in monitoring the circadian emissions of fragrance by the plant Madagascar Jasmin and in the discrimination and classification of different samples of flaxseed, respectively. An innovative approach in the development of sensitive thin films based on organized liquid crystal micelles in an ionic liquid, encapsulated in a biopolymer matrix and used as sensitive layers for gas sensors, is the focus of this thesis. Liquid crystal micelles acting as sensitive elements that change reversibly their orientation in the presence of volatile compounds showed, as a proof of concept, their potential use in the classification of volatile solvents. They were also successfully tested for monitoring the quality of Tilapia fish. The combination of this optical system with the electrical system gave the so called "hybrid sensor" with dual response. Thus, a single sensor was efficient in the quantification of ethanol in gasoline. Polarized light microscopy, SEM and AFM techniques were used to study the morphology of these layers and have revealed that the formation of the micelles is closely influenced by the solvent where the liquid crystal molecules are arranged. QCM studies were conducted in order to learn more about the interaction of these films with volatile compounds, and to check the influence of parameters such as the exposure time, solvent nature, film composition and drying time, on the film. These biopolymer films were also used as immobilisation matrix for cytochrome c, forming electrochemical sensors having an additional optical response
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