4 research outputs found

    Development of a high-accuracy, low-cost, and portable fluorometer with smartphone application for the detection of urinary albumin towards the early screening of chronic kidney and renal diseases

    Get PDF
    This study presents the development of a portable fluorometer with a smartphone application designed to facilitate the early screening of chronic kidney and renal diseases by enabling the sensitive detection of urinary albumin. Utilizing a fluorescence-based aptasensor, the device achieved a linear calibration curve (0.001–1.5 mg/mL) with a linearity of up to 0.98022 and a detection limit of 0.203 µg/mL for human serum albumin (HSA). The analysis of 130 urine samples demonstrated comparable performance between this study’s fluorometer, a commercial fluorometer, and the standard automated method. These findings validate the feasibility of the portable fluorometer and aptasensor combination as a reliable instrument for the sensitive and specific measurement of HSA in urine samples. Moreover, the fluorometer’s portability offers potential applications in portable point-of-care testing, enhancing its utility in clinical settings for early disease screening

    Piezoelectric MEMS: Microsystems Based on Bulk PZT Lateral Bimorphs for Low-Power Applications and Toward Bulk Diffraction Wave Gyroscopes

    Full text link
    216 pagesPiezoelectric microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) technology, compared to conventional discrete manufacturing techniques, allows the development of sensors and wireless transmitters in smaller sizes, lowered cost, and lower power consumption. This dissertation presents two research areas of piezoelectric MEMS: microsystems based on bulk lead zirconate titanate (PZT) lateral bimorphs, and high-overtone bulk diffraction wave gyroscopes. First, the microsystems for low power applications are developed based on piezoelectric lateral bimorphs fabricated by a 150-µm-resolution laser-micromachining process on 500-µm-thick bulk PZT. Compared to piezoelectric thin-film bimorphs, bulk PZT provides higher electromechanical coupling (k33 = 0.72) and high dielectric coefficient (εr = 1275). The high k33 enables efficient transduction from electrical to mechanical domain for actuators, and high mechanical to electrical signal for sensors. The high εr enables greater charge to be generated for energy harvesters. This dissertation presents PZT-bimorph-based microsystems designed for the following applications: 1) near-zero power consumption event detection devices, 2) in-situ MEMS gyroscope calibration, and 3) ultralow frequency (ULF) communication by mechanical motion of magnets. The first application is the near-zero power event detection, where zero-power PZT-bimorph-based sensors are used to measure acceleration, rotation, magnetic field, and sound. NEMS switches or CMOS comparators detect desired signal patterns and generate wakeup triggers. Prototypes are evaluated in the laboratory and field tests consisting of detections of electrical generators, cars, and trucks. The power consumption of the system with a low-power CMOS comparator is 2-6 nW, which potentially enables the development of long-lifetime battery-powered IoT devices. The second application is the calibration of MEMS gyroscopes, where PZT-bimorph-based dither stages are used to calibrate and reduce gyroscope scale factor errors down to 50 ppm from 5.5%. Gyroscopes integrated with the calibration dither stages potentially allows for low-cost gyroscopes to be used for navigation, significantly reducing the cost, weight, and size of navigation grade gyroscopes. The third application is the ULF communication, which permanent magnets are actuated by the PZT-bimorph-based dither stages to generate a time-varying magnetic field in the ULF range (300 Hz - 3 kHz). A transmitter prototype consumes lower power (1.8 µW) and is capable of wirelessly communicating up to 20 m at a frequency of 893 Hz and modulation bandwidth of 2.4 Hz. The transmitter can potentially communicate underwater, underground, and in the air due to low attenuation, reflection, and refraction of the ULF magnetic induction. High-overtone bulk diffraction wave gyroscopes are developed to operate in high-shock environments such as autonomous vehicles during accidents. Unlike most commercial MEMS gyroscopes, this gyroscope eliminates the need for proof masses, which can impact parts of the package when exposed to high shocks. The gyroscope uses interdigitated electrodes that excite thickness mode resonances of the longitudinal waves in a lithium niobate substrate. The gyroscope measures rotation from the effects of the Coriolis force on bulk acoustic shear waves generated by the diffraction and reflection of the longitudinal wave

    Effects of Boric Acid and Storage Temperature on the Analysis of Microalbumin Using Aptasensor-Based Fluorescent Detection

    No full text
    The instability of human serum albumin (HSA) in urine samples makes fresh urine a requirement for microalbumin analyses using immunoturbidimetry. Here, we determined the ability of an aptasensor-based fluorescent platform to detect microalbumin in old, boric acid-preserved urine samples. Our results show that the cleavage site of protease enzymes on urine albumin protein differed from the binding position of the aptamer on HSA protein, suggesting the aptasensor may be effective for albumin detection in non-fresh urine. Furthermore, the addition of boric acid in urine samples over a short term (at ambient temperature (Ta) and 4 °C), long term (−20 and −80 °C), and following freeze–thawing (1–3 cycles) did not significantly affect albumin stability, as analyzed using the aptasensor. Therefore, boric acid stabilized has in urine stored over a short- and long-term. Thus, the aptasensor developed by us is applicable for HSA detection in boric acid-preserved urine that has been stored for 7-d at Ta and 4 °C, and in the long-term at −80 °C
    corecore