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Performance of the Spreeta 2000 integrated surface plasmon resonance affinity sensor

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TLDR
In this article, the authors report on the performance of TI's newest surface plasmon resonance (SPR) sensor, the Spreeta 2000, measured using instruments developed by TI and by Prolinx Inc., who are developing advanced molecular interaction analysis technology utilizing a proprietary version of SPreeta2000.
Abstract
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) has become well established as a laboratory tool for the study of biological binding reactions, but has had limited application outside of this context. With the goal of moving SPR applications from high-cost systems designed for central laboratories to low-cost, portable electronic systems designed for the field, Texas Instruments Inc. (TI), has developed Spreeta, a line of compact, integrated SPR sensor components. This paper reports on the performance of TI’s newest SPR device, the Spreeta 2000, measured using instruments developed by TI and by Prolinx Inc., who are developing advanced molecular interaction analysis technology utilizing a proprietary version of Spreeta 2000. Noise optimization techniques including averaging and sum normalization are discussed, and the dependence of refractive index (RI) noise on these techniques is measured. For a measurement time of 0.8 s, a noise level of 1.8×10 −7 RI is observed. To estimate the accuracy potentially obtainable using the sensor, the smoothness of the sensor response is measured using RI gradients, and is found to be 0.2% over a change in RI of 0.04. As a demonstration of the capabilities of the Spreeta 2000 when incorporated into an appropriate instrumentation system, an automated assay for mouse IgG is presented.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Surface Plasmon Resonance Sensors for Detection of Chemical and Biological Species

Jirri Homola
- 30 Jan 2008 - 
TL;DR: This work presents a meta-analysis of the literature on food quality and safety analysis and its applications in the context of veterinary drugs and drugs and drug-Induced Antibodies, which focuses on the role of canine coronavirus in the veterinary industry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sensitive optical biosensors for unlabeled targets: a review.

TL;DR: This article reviews the recent progress in optical biosensors that use the label-free detection protocol, in which biomolecules are unlabeled or unmodified, and are detected in their natural forms, and focuses on the optical biosENSors that utilize the refractive index change as the sensing transduction signal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lab-on-a-chip devices for global health: Past studies and future opportunities

TL;DR: This review identifies diseases that are most in need of new health technologies, special design criteria for LOC devices to be deployed in a variety of resource-poor settings, and review past research into LOC devices for global health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards integrated and sensitive surface plasmon resonance biosensors: a review of recent progress.

TL;DR: This review paper focuses on the progress made over the past 4 years toward the integration of sensitive SPR to lab-on-a-chip platforms and descriptions of novel SPR optical approaches and materials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) sensors: approaching their limits?

TL;DR: A unified theoretical model of the resolution of SPR sensors is reported which makes it possible to predict the ultimate performance of all major configurations ofspr sensors, indicating that the best state-of-art SPR sensors are approaching their theoretical limits.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative interpretation of the response of surface plasmon resonance sensors to adsorbed films

TL;DR: In this article, a simple but quantitative mathematical formalism for interpretation of surface plasmon resonance (SPR) signals from adsorbed films of a wide variety of structures is presented.
Book

Low noise electronic system design

J.A. Connelly
TL;DR: In this article, the use of SPICE and PSpice for low-noise analysis and design is discussed, and several examples of practical amplifier designs are discussed. But the authors focus on IC design concepts with additional support for discrete design where necessary.
Journal ArticleDOI

A commercial solution for surface plasmon sensing

TL;DR: In this article, a fully integrated surface plasmon resonance transducer is described, which is based on the encapsulation of the required electro-optical components within the optical material, through a molding process.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of a surface plasmon resonance sensor for commercial applications

TL;DR: An optical tabletop system based on surface plasmon resonance (SPR) for refractive index determination has been developed to demonstrate the feasibility of a miniaturized and integrated concept which is also described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrated analytical sensors: the use of the TISPR-1 as a biosensor

TL;DR: The TISPR-1 integrated surface plasmon resonance (SPR) sensor has features that make it ideal for use in a distributed sensor environment and, combined with simple bio-films, is shown to be capable of a wide variety of bio-assays.
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