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Journal ArticleDOI

Recent developments in paper-based microfluidic devices.

06 Jan 2015-Analytical Chemistry (American Chemical Society)-Vol. 87, Iss: 1, pp 19-41
About: This article is published in Analytical Chemistry.The article was published on 2015-01-06. It has received 971 citations till now.
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive review on the development and state of the art of colorimetric and fluorometric sensor arrays is presented and the various chemometric and statistical analyses of high-dimensional data are presented and critiqued in reference to their use in chemical sensing.
Abstract: A comprehensive review on the development and state of the art of colorimetric and fluorometric sensor arrays is presented Chemical sensing aims to detect subtle changes in the chemical environment by transforming relevant chemical or physical properties of molecular or ionic species (ie, analytes) into an analytically useful output Optical arrays based on chemoresponsive colorants (dyes and nanoporous pigments) probe the chemical reactivity of analytes, rather than their physical properties (eg, mass) The chemical specificity of the olfactory system does not come from specific receptors for specific analytes (eg, the traditional lock-and-key model of substrate-enzyme interactions), but rather olfaction makes use of pattern recognition of the combined response of several hundred olfactory receptors In a similar fashion, arrays of chemoresponsive colorants provide high-dimensional data from the color or fluorescence changes of the dyes in these arrays as they are exposed to analytes This provides chemical sensing with high sensitivity (often down to parts per billion levels), impressive discrimination among very similar analytes, and exquisite fingerprinting of extremely similar mixtures over a wide range of analyte types, in both the gas and liquid phases Design of both sensor arrays and instrumentation for their analysis are discussed In addition, the various chemometric and statistical analyses of high-dimensional data (including hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA), principal component analysis (PCA), linear discriminant analysis (LDA), support vector machines (SVMs), and artificial neural networks (ANNs)) are presented and critiqued in reference to their use in chemical sensing A variety of applications are also discussed, including personal dosimetry of toxic industrial chemical, detection of explosives or accelerants, quality control of foods and beverages, biosensing intracellularly, identification of bacteria and fungi, and detection of cancer and disease biomarkers

639 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Graphene and its oxygenated derivatives, including reduced graphene oxide (rGO), are becoming an important class of nanomaterials in the field of biosensors as discussed by the authors, and the discovery of graphene has spectacularly accelerated research on fabricating low-cost electrode materials because of its unique physical properties, including high specific surface area, high carrier mobility, high electrical conductivity, flexibility.
Abstract: Biosensors with high sensitivity, selectivity and a low limit of detection, reaching nano/picomolar concentrations of biomolecules, are important to the medical sciences and healthcare industry for evaluating physiological and metabolic parameters. Over the last decade, different nanomaterials have been exploited to design highly efficient biosensors for the detection of analyte biomolecules. The discovery of graphene has spectacularly accelerated research on fabricating low-cost electrode materials because of its unique physical properties, including high specific surface area, high carrier mobility, high electrical conductivity, flexibility, and optical transparency. Graphene and its oxygenated derivatives, including graphene oxide (GO) and reduced graphene oxide (rGO), are becoming an important class of nanomaterials in the field of biosensors. The presence of oxygenated functional groups makes GO nanosheets strongly hydrophilic, facilitating chemical functionalization. Graphene, GO and rGO nanosheets can be easily combined with various types of inorganic nanoparticles, including metals, metal oxides, semiconducting nanoparticles, quantum dots, organic polymers and biomolecules, to create a diverse range of graphene-based nanocomposites with enhanced sensitivity for biosensor applications. This review summarizes the advances in two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) graphene-based nanocomposites as emerging electrochemical and fluorescent biosensing platforms for the detection of a wide range of biomolecules with enhanced sensitivity, selectivity and a low limit of detection. The biofunctionalization and nanocomposite formation processes of graphene-based materials and their unique properties, surface functionalization, enzyme immobilization strategies, covalent immobilization, physical adsorption, biointeractions and direct electron transfer (DET) processes are discussed in connection with the design and fabrication of biosensors. The enzymatic and nonenzymatic reactions on graphene-based nanocomposite surfaces for glucose- and cholesterol-related electrochemical biosensors are analyzed. This review covers a very broad range of graphene-based electrochemical and fluorescent biosensors for the detection of glucose, cholesterol, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), nucleic acids (DNA/RNA), genes, enzymes, cofactors nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) and adenosine triphosphate (ATP), dopamine (DA), ascorbic acid (AA), uric acid (UA), cancer biomarkers, pathogenic microorganisms, food toxins, toxic heavy metal ions, mycotoxins, and pesticides. The sensitivity and selectivity of graphene-based electrochemical and fluorescent biosensors are also examined with respect to interfering analytes present in biological systems. Finally, the future outlook for the development of graphene based biosensing technology is outlined.

454 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review examines the advances in paper-based microfluidic diagnostics for medical diagnosis in the context of global health from 2007 to 2016 and highlights emerging health applications, such as male fertility testing and wearable diagnostics.
Abstract: Infectious diseases are a major global health issue. Diagnosis is a critical first step in effectively managing their spread. Paper-based microfluidic diagnostics first emerged in 2007 as a low-cost alternative to conventional laboratory testing, with the goal of improving accessibility to medical diagnostics in developing countries. In this review, we examine the advances in paper-based microfluidic diagnostics for medical diagnosis in the context of global health from 2007 to 2016. The theory of fluid transport in paper is first presented. The next section examines the strategies that have been employed to control fluid and analyte transport in paper-based assays. Tasks such as mixing, timing, and sequential fluid delivery have been achieved in paper and have enabled analytical capabilities comparable to those of conventional laboratory methods. The following section examines paper-based sample processing and analysis. The most impactful advancement here has been the translation of nucleic acid analysis...

409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present work addresses the structure, synthesis, properties, and the incorporation of magnetic NPs in nanocomposites, highlighting the most relevant effects of the synthesis on the magnetic and structural properties of the magnet NPs and how these effects limit their utilization in the biomedical area.
Abstract: V.F.C. and A.F. contributed equally to this work. The authors thank the FCT—Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia—for financial support under framework of the Strategic Funding UID/FIS/04650/2013, project PTDC/ EEI-SII/5582/2014 and project UID/EEA/04436/2013 by FEDER funds through the COMPETE 2020—Programa Operacional Competitividade e Internacionalizacao (POCI). Funds provided by FCT in the framework of EuroNanoMed 2016 call, Project LungChek ENMed/0049/2016 are also gratefully acknowledged. V.F.C., A.F., C.R., and P.M. also thank the FCT for the grants SFRH/BPD/98109/2013, SFRH/BPD/104204/2014, SFRH/ BPD/90870/2012 and SFRH/BPD/96227/2013, respectively. Finally, the authors acknowledge funding by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) through the project MAT2016-76039C4-3-R (AEI/FEDER, UE) and from the Basque Government Industry Department under the ELKARTEK program.

403 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This Review discusses the combination of inkjet printing technology with paper as a printing substrate for the fabrication of microfluidic paper-based analytical devices (μPADs), which have developed into a fast-growing new field in analytical chemistry.
Abstract: Rapid, precise, and reproducible deposition of a broad variety of functional materials, including analytical assay reagents and biomolecules, has made inkjet printing an effective tool for the fabrication of microanalytical devices. A ubiquitous office device as simple as a standard desktop printer with its multiple ink cartridges can be used for this purpose. This Review discusses the combination of inkjet printing technology with paper as a printing substrate for the fabrication of microfluidic paper-based analytical devices (μPADs), which have developed into a fast-growing new field in analytical chemistry. After introducing the fundamentals of μPADs and inkjet printing, it touches on topics such as the microfluidic patterning of paper, tailored arrangement of materials, and functionalities achievable exclusively by the inkjet deposition of analytical assay components, before concluding with an outlook on future perspectives.

390 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recommendations of the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards continue to be based on this publication; the “Kirby-Bauer” method is, among the many disk methods used in other countries, still the one that has been researched most thoroughly and updated continuously.
Abstract: In the words of the authors, the paper by A. W. Bauer et al., from the University of Washington in Seattle, on a standardized single-disk method for antibiotic susceptibility testing “. . . consolidate(s) and update(s) previous descriptions of the method and provide(s) a concise outline for its performance and interpretation.” Clinical microbiologists were relieved that finally a disk diffusion method had been standardized, could be used with ease, and provided reliable results as compared with minimum inhibitory concentration tests. The pivotal role of Hans Ericsson’s theoretical and practical studies (H. Ericsson and G. Svartz-Malmberg, Antibiot. Chemother. 6:41–74, 1959), as well as earlier reports by some of the authors of the publications cited, must be mentioned as a matter of fairness. Most of the recommendations given are still valid today even though some of the antimicrobial agents are obsolete, new ones have been added, some zone sizes had to be modified, and new media were designed for Haemophilus influenzae and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Recommendations of the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards continue to be based on this publication; the “Kirby-Bauer” method is, among the many disk methods used in other countries, still the one that has been researched most thoroughly and updated continuously. ALEXANDER VON GRAEVENITZ

16,916 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This communication describes a simple method for patterning paper to create well-defined, millimeter-sized channels, comprising hydrophilic paper bounded by hydrophobic polymer, that will become the basis for low-cost, portable, and technically simple multiplexed bioassays.
Abstract: This communication describes a simple method for patterning paper to create well-defined, millimeter-sized channels, comprising hydrophilic paper bounded by hydrophobic polymer. We believe that this type of patterned paper will become the basis for low-cost, portable, and technically simple multiplexed bioassays. We demonstrate this capability by the simultaneous detection of glucose and protein in 5 μL of urine. The assay system is small, disposable, easy to use (and carry), and requires no external equipment, reagents, or power sources. We believe this kind of system is attractive for uses in less-industrialized countries, in the field, or as an inexpensive alternative to more advanced technologies already used in clinical settings.[1-4] The analysis of biological fluids is necessary for monitoring the health of populations,[2] but these measurements are difficult to implement in remote regions such as those found in less-industrialized countries, in emergency situations, or in home health-care settings.[3] Conventional laboratory instruments provide quantitative measurements of biological samples, but they are unsuitable for these situations since they are large, expensive, and require trained personnel and considerable volumes of biological samples.[2] Other bioassay platforms provide alternatives to more expensive instruments,[5-7] but the need remains for a platform that uses small volumes of sample and that is sufficiently inexpensive to be used widely for measuring samples from large populations. We believe that paper may serve as a particularly convenient platform for running bioassays in the remote situations locations. As a prototype for a mthod we believe to be particularly promosing, we patterned photoresist onto chromatography paper to form defined areas of hydrophilic paper separated by hydrophobic lines or “walls”; these patterns provide spatial control of biological fluids and enable fluid transport, without pumping, due to capillary action in the millimeter-sized channels produced. This method for patterning paper makes it possible to run multiple diagnostic assays on one strip of paper, while still using only small volumes of a single sample. In a fully developed technology, patterned photoresist would be replaced by an appropriate printing technology, but patterning paper with photoresist is: i) convenient for prototyping these devices, and ii) a useful new micropatterning technology in its own right. We patterned chromatography paper with SU-8 2010 photoresist as shown in Figure 1a and as described below: we soaked a 7.5-cm diameter piece of chromatography paper in 2 mL of SU-8 2010 for 30 s, spun it at 2000 rpm for 30 s, and then baked it at 95 °C for 5 min to remove the cyclopentanone in the SU-8 formula. We then exposed the photoresist and paper to 405 nm UV light (50 mW/cm2) for 10 s through a photo-mask (CAD/Art Services, Inc.) that was aligned using a mask aligner (OL-2 Mask Aligner, AB-M, Inc). After exposure, we baked the paper a second time at 95 °C for 5 min to cross-link the exposed portions of the resist. The unpolymerized photoresist was removed by soaking the paper in propylene glycol monomethyl ether acetate (PGMEA) (5 min), and by washing the pattern with propan-2-ol (3 × 10 mL). The paper was more hydrophobic after it was patterned, presumably due to residual resist bound to the paper, so we exposed the entire surface to an oxygen plasma for 10 s at 600 millitorr (SPI Plasma-Prep II, Structure Probe, Inc) to increase the hydrophilicity of the paper (Figures 2a and 2b). Figure 1 Chromatography paper patterned with photoresist. The darker lines are cured photoresist; the lighter areas are unexposed paper. (a) Patterned paper after absorbing 5 μL of Waterman red ink by capillary action. The central channel absorbs the sample ... Figure 2 Assays contaminated with (a) dirt, (b) plant pollen, and (c) graphite powder. The pictures were taken before and after running an artificial urine solution that contained 550 mM glucose and 75 μM BSA. The particulates do not move up the channels ... The patterned paper can be derivatized for biological assays by adding appropriate reagents to the test areas (Figures 1b and ​and2b).2b). In this communication, we demonstrate the method by detecting glucose and protein,[8] but the surface should be suitable for measuring many other analytes as well.[7] The glucose assay is based on the enzymatic oxidation of iodide to iodine,[9] where a color change from clear to brown is associated with the presence of glucose.[10] The protein assay is based on the color change of tetrabromophenol blue (TBPB) when it ionizes and binds to proteins;[11] a positive result in this case is indicated by a color change from yellow to blue. For the glucose assay, we spotted 0.3 μL of a 0.6 M solution of potassium iodide, followed by 0.3 μL of a 1:5 horseradish peroxidase/glucose oxidase solution (15 units of protein per mL of solution). For the protein assay, we spotted 0.3 μL of a 250-mM citrate buffer (pH 1.8) in a well separate from the glucose assay, and then layered 0.3 μL of a 3.3 mM solution of tetrabromophenol blue (TBPB) in 95% ethanol over the citrate buffer. The spotted reagents were allowed to air dry at room temperature. This pre-loaded paper gave consistent results for the protein assay regardless of storage temperature and time (when stored for 15 d both at 0 °C and at 23 °C, wrapped in aluminum foil). The glucose assay was sensitive to storage conditions, and showed decreased signal for assays run 24 h after spotting the reagents (when stored at 23 °C); when stored at 0 °C, however, the glucose assay was as sensitive after day 15 as it was on day 1. We measured artificial samples of glucose and protein in clinically relevant ranges (2.5-50 mM for glucose and 0.38-7.5 μM for bovine serum albumin (BSA))[12, 13] by dipping the bottom of each test strip in 5 μL of a pre-made test solution (Figure 2d). The fluid filled the entire pattern within ca. one minute, but the assays required 10-11 min for the paper to dry and for the color to fully develop.[14] In all cases, we observed color changes corresponding roughly in intensity to the amount of glucose and protein in the test samples, where the lowest concentrations define the lower limits to which these assays can be used (Figure 2e). For comparison, commercially-available dipsticks detect glucose at concentrations as low as 5 mM[7, 9] and protein as low as 0.75 μM;[6, 15] these limits indicate that these paper-based assays are comparable in sensitivity to commercial dipstick assays. Our assay format also allows for the measurement of multiple analytes. This paper-based assay is suitable for measuring multiple samples in parallel and in a relatively short period of time. For example, in one trial, one researcher was able to run 20 different samples (all with 550 mM glucose and 75 μM BSA) within 7.5 min (followed by another 10.5 min for the color to fully develop). An 18-min assay of this type—one capable of measuring two analytes in 20 different sample—may be efficient enough to use in high-throughput screens of larger sample pools. In the field, samples will not be measured under sterile conditions, and dust and dirt may contaminate the assays. The combination of paper and capillary action provides a mechanism for separating particulates from a biological fluid. As a demonstration, we purposely contaminated the artificial urine samples with quantities of dirt, plant pollen, and graphite powder at levels higher than we might expect to see in the samples in the field. These particulates do not move up the channels under the action of capillary wicking, and do not interfere with the assay (Figure 3). Paper strips have been used in biomedical assays for decades because they offer an inexpensive platform for colorimetric chemical testing.[1] Patterned paper has characteristics that lead to miniaturized assays that run by capillary action (e.g., without external pumping), with small volumes of fluids. These methods suggest a path for the development of simple, inexpensive, and portable diagnostic assays that may be useful in remote settings, and in particular, in less-industrialized countries where simple assays are becoming increasingly important for detecting disease and monitoring health,[16, 17], for environmental monitoring, in veterinary and agricultural practice and for other applications.

2,580 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Microfluidic paper-based analytical devices are a new class of point-of-care diagnostic devices that are inexpensive, easy to use, and designed specifically for use in developing countries.
Abstract: Microfluidic paper-based analytical devices (μPADs) are a new class of point-of-care diagnostic devices that are inexpensive, easy to use, and designed specifically for use in developing countries. (To listen to a podcast about this feature, please go to the Analytical Chemistry multimedia page at pubs.acs.org/page/ancham/audio/index.html.)

2,373 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review includes challenges to scaling up, commercialisation and regulatory issues, and the factors which limit paper-based microfluidic devices to become real world products and future directions are also identified.
Abstract: Dipstick and lateral-flow formats have dominated rapid diagnostics over the last three decades. These formats gained popularity in the consumer markets due to their compactness, portability and facile interpretation without external instrumentation. However, lack of quantitation in measurements has challenged the demand of existing assay formats in consumer markets. Recently, paper-based microfluidics has emerged as a multiplexable point-of-care platform which might transcend the capabilities of existing assays in resource-limited settings. However, paper-based microfluidics can enable fluid handling and quantitative analysis for potential applications in healthcare, veterinary medicine, environmental monitoring and food safety. Currently, in its early development stages, paper-based microfluidics is considered a low-cost, lightweight, and disposable technology. The aim of this review is to discuss: (1) fabrication of paper-based microfluidic devices, (2) functionalisation of microfluidic components to increase the capabilities and the performance, (3) introduction of existing detection techniques to the paper platform and (4) exploration of extracting quantitative readouts via handheld devices and camera phones. Additionally, this review includes challenges to scaling up, commercialisation and regulatory issues. The factors which limit paper-based microfluidic devices to become real world products and future directions are also identified.

1,658 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A detailed study on wax printing, a simple and inexpensive method for fabricating microfluidic devices in paper using a commercially available printer and hot plate, which creates complete hydrophobic barriers in paper that define hydrophilic channels, fluid reservoirs, and reaction zones.
Abstract: This technical note describes a detailed study on wax printing, a simple and inexpensive method for fabricating microfluidic devices in paper using a commercially available printer and hot plate. The printer prints patterns of solid wax on the surface of the paper, and the hot plate melts the wax so that it penetrates the full thickness of the paper. This process creates complete hydrophobic barriers in paper that define hydrophilic channels, fluid reservoirs, and reaction zones. The design of each device was based on a simple equation that accounts for the spreading of molten wax in paper.

1,403 citations