Quantitative, high-sensitivity measurement of liquid analytes using a smartphone compass.
Mark S FerrisGary ZabowPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Smartphone ubiquity has led to rapid developments in portable diagnostics. While successful, such platforms are predominantly optics-based, using the smartphone camera as the sensing interface. By contrast, magnetics-based modalities exploiting the smartphone compass (magnetometer) remain unexplored, despite inherent advantages in optically opaque, scattering or auto-fluorescing samples. Here we report smartphone analyte sensing utilizing the built-in magnetometer for signal transduction via analyte-responsive magnetic-hydrogel composites. As these hydrogels dilate in response to targeted stimuli, they displace attached magnetic material relative to the phone's magnetometer. Using a bilayer hydrogel geometry to amplify this motion allows for sensitive, optics-free, quantitative liquid-based analyte measurements that require neither any electronics nor power beyond that contained within the smartphone itself. We demonstrate this concept with glucose-specific and pH-responsive hydrogels, including glucose detection down to single-digit micromolar concentrations with potential for extension to nanomolar sensitivities. The platform is adaptable to numerous measurands, opening a path towards portable, inexpensive sensing of multiple analytes or biomarkers of interest.
Keyphrases
- drug delivery
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- high resolution
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- magnetic resonance
- ionic liquid
- molecularly imprinted
- risk assessment
- blood glucose
- computed tomography
- high throughput
- gold nanoparticles
- low cost
- mass spectrometry
- metabolic syndrome
- convolutional neural network
- skeletal muscle
- reduced graphene oxide
- simultaneous determination
- climate change
- label free
- african american
- solid phase extraction
- aqueous solution
- liquid chromatography