Ultra-Fast Portable and Wearable Sensing Design for Continuous and Wide-Spectrum Molecular Analysis and Diagnostics.
Arnab MaityYana MilyutinVivian Darsa MaidantchikYael Hershkovitz PollakYoav BrozaRawan OmarYoubin ZhengWalaa SalibaTan-Phat HuynhHossam HaickPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2022)
The design and characterization of spatiotemporal nano-/micro-structural arrangement that enable real-time and wide-spectrum molecular analysis is reported and demonestrated in new horizons of biomedical applications, such as wearable-spectrometry, ultra-fast and onsite biopsy-decision-making for intraoperative surgical oncology, chiral-drug identification, etc. The spatiotemporal sesning arrangement is achieved by scalable, binder-free, functionalized hybrid spin-sensitive (<↑| or <↓|) graphene-ink printed sensing layers on free-standing films made of porous, fibrous, and naturally helical cellulose networks in hierarchically stacked geometrical configuration (HSGC). The HSGC operates according to a time-space-resolved architecture that modulate the mass-transfer rate for separation, eluation and detection of each individual compound within a mixture of the like, hereby providing a mass spectrogram. The HSGC could be used for a wide range of applictions, including fast and real-time spectrogram generator of volatile organic compounds during liquid-biopsy, without the need of any immunochemistry-staining and complex power-hungry cryogenic machines; and wearable spectrometry that provide spectral signature of molecular profiles emiited from skin in the course of various dietry conditions.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- heart rate
- decision making
- ultrasound guided
- fine needle aspiration
- gas chromatography
- palliative care
- quantum dots
- optical coherence tomography
- single molecule
- low cost
- mass spectrometry
- liquid chromatography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- emergency department
- carbon nanotubes
- label free
- patients undergoing
- soft tissue
- density functional theory
- capillary electrophoresis
- highly efficient
- electron transfer