| Literature DB >> 30404261 |
Lori Shayne Alamo Busa1,2, Saeed Mohammadi3, Masatoshi Maeki4, Akihiko Ishida5, Hirofumi Tani6, Manabu Tokeshi7,8,9,10.
Abstract
Food and water contamination cause safety and health concerns to both animals and humans. Conventional methods for monitoring food and water contamination are often laborious and require highly skilled technicians to perform the measurements, making the quest for developing simpler and cost-effective techniques for rapid monitoring incessant. Since the pioneering works of Whitesides' group from 2007, interest has been strong in the development and application of microfluidic paper-based analytical devices (μPADs) for food and water analysis, which allow easy, rapid and cost-effective point-of-need screening of the targets. This paper reviews recently reported μPADs that incorporate different detection methods such as colorimetric, electrochemical, fluorescence, chemiluminescence, and electrochemiluminescence techniques for food and water analysis.Entities:
Keywords: food analysis; point-of-need; water analysis; μPADs
Year: 2016 PMID: 30404261 PMCID: PMC6189793 DOI: 10.3390/mi7050086
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1Examples of μPADs fabricated using different methods and paper substrates: (a) Wax patterning, WCP1. Reprinted with permission from reference [28]. Copyright 2015 American Chemical Society. (b) Wax printing, WP1. Reprinted with permission from reference [31]. Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society. (c) Wax printing, AP319. Reprinted with permission from reference [39]. Copyright 2015 American Chemical Society. (d) Alkylsilane self-assembling and UV/O3-patterning, WFP1. Reprinted with permission from reference [52]. Copyright 2013 American Chemical Society. (e) Wax printing with screen-printed electrodes, WCP1. Reprinted with permission from reference [38]. Copyright 2010 The Royal Society of Chemistry. (f) Polymer screen printing, WFP4. Reprinted with permission from reference [42]. Copyright 2016 The Royal Society of Chemistry. (g) Contact stamping, JPFP40. Reprinted with permission from reference [44]. Copyright 2015 The Royal Society of Chemistry. (h) Contact stamping, WFP1. Reprinted with permission from reference [45]. Copyright 2014 American Chemical Society. (i) Photolithography, CP. Reprinted with permission from reference [46]. Copyright 2013 The Royal Society of Chemistry. WFP1, Whatman No. 1 filter paper; WCP1, Whatman No. chromatography paper; WP1, Whatman No. 1 paper; AP310, Ahlstrom 319 paper; WFP4, Whatman No. 4 filter paper; JPFP40, JProLab JP 40 filter paper; CP, chromatography paper.
Figure 2Detection methods for pathogens. (a) An image of a single-channel μPAD and (b) the smartphone application for Salmonella detection on a multi-channel μPAD. Reprinted with permission from reference [46]. Copyright 2013 The Royal Society of Chemistry. (c) Schematic layout of the PDMS/paper hybrid μPAD system and illustration of the one-step multiplexed FL detection principle on the μPAD during aptamer adsorption (Step 1) and liberation (Step 2) from the GO surface and the restoration of the FL for detection in the presence of the target pathogen. Reprinted with permission from reference [60]. Copyright 2013 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 3Colorimetric detection of pesticides based on the enzyme inhibition properties of the pesticide on nanoceria substrate. Reprinted with permission from reference [42]. Copyright 2016 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 4(a) Griess-color reaction assay-based detection methods for nitrite using a smartphone for image processing. Reprinted with permission from reference [45]. Copyright 2014 American Chemical Society. (b) Griess-color reaction assay-based detection methods for nitrite and nitrate using 2D (i) and 3D (ii–iv) μPADs. Reprinted with permission from reference [53]. Copyright 2014 American Chemical Society.
Figure 5Detection methods for metals. (a) Electrochemical device for SWASV analysis of lead in water with screen-printed carbon working and counter electrodes and Ag/AgCl pseudo-reference electrode. Reprinted with permission from reference [47]. Copyright 2009 The Royal Society of Chemistry. (b) Multiplexed colorimetric detection of metals based on B-GAL and CPRG interaction in the presence of Hg2+, Cu2+, Cr6+ and Ni2+ mixture. Reprinted with permission from reference [31]. Copyright 2011 American Chemical Society.
Figure 6Detection methods for other food and water contaminants. (a) Components of the electrochemical detection system for ethanol using a glucometer as a readout device. Reprinted with permission from reference [38]. Copyright 2010 The Royal Society of Chemistry. (b) The configuration of the electrochemical cell for the analysis of halides utilizing silver components as electrodes on paper-assisted electrochemical detection. Reprinted with permission from reference [56]. Copyright 2015 American Chemical Society. (c) A representative paper-based colorimetric bioassay of BSA based on the enzymatically generated quinone from tyrosinase and chitosan interaction in the presence of the phenolic compound. Reprinted with permission from ref [59]. Copyright 2012 American Chemical Society.
Summary of foodborne pathogens, toxins, pesticides and insecticides, heavy metals and food additives for food and water analyses on paper-based platforms.
| Target | μPAD Wall Fabrication Method | Paper Substrate | Detection Method | Linear Detection Range | LOD | Real Sample Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Wax printing | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | Colorimetric | - | 106 CFU mL−1, 104 CFU mL−1, 108 CFU mL−1 | Bologna | [
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| Wax printing | Whatman No. 1 chromatography paper | CL | - | 2.6 × 107 CFU mL−1 | - | [
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| Photolithography | Chromatography paper | Optical (Mie scattering) | 102–105 CFU mL−1* | 102 CFU mL−1 | - | [
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| Cutting by punching (PDMS/paper/glass hybrid) | Whatman chromatography paper | FL | 104–106 CFU mL−1, 42.2–675.0 CFU mL−1 | 800.0 CFU mL−1, 61.0 CFU mL−1 | - | [
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| - | Millipore MCE membrane filter | Colorimetric and bioluminescence | - | 4 CFU mL−1 | - | [
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| Wax pencil drawing and PDMS screen printing | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | Colorimetric | - | 57 CFU mL−1 | Drinking water | [
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| 2,4-D | - | Whatman No. 1 chromatography paper | CL | - | 1.0 pM | Tap water, lake water | [
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| Paraoxon, Malathion | Wax printing | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | Colorimetric | 1 × 10−8–ca. 1 × 10−6 M | 10 nM | - | [
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| Methyl-paraoxon, Chlorpyrifos-oxon | Polymer screen-printing | Whatman No. 4 filter paper | Colorimetric | 0–0.1 μg·mL−1, 0–60 ng·mL−1 | 18 ng·mL−1, 5.3 ng·mL−1 | For methyl-paraoxon: cabbage, dried green mussel | [
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| Dichlorvos | Cutting | Whatman 3MM Chr chromatography paper | CL | 10 ng·mL−1–1.0 μg·mL−1 | 3.6 ng·mL−1 | Cucumber, tomato, cabbage | [
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| Dichlorvos | Cutting | Whatman 3MM Chr chromatography paper | CL | 3.0 ng·mL−1–1.0 μg·mL−1 | 0.8 ng·mL−1 | Cabbage, tomato | [
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| Methomyl, Profenofos | Cutting | Canson paper | Colorimetric | - | 6.16 × 10−4 mM, 0.27 mM | - | [
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| PCP | Wax screen-printing | Whatman No. 1 chromatography paper | PEC | 0.01–100 ng·mL−1 | 4 pg·mL−1 | - | [
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| Methyl viologen (paraquat) | Cutting | Whatman filter paper | FL | 0.39 μmol·L−1–3.89 μmol·L−1 | 0.16 μmol·L−1 | - | [
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| Glucose | Cutting by punching | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | Electrochemical | 1–5 mM | 0.18 mM | Commercial soda beverages | [
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| Glucose, Fructose, Sucrose | Wax printing | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | Electrochemical | - | 270 nM, 340 nM, 430 nM | Coca-Cola™, Orange Powerade™, Strawberry Lemonade Powerade™, Red Bull™, Vitamin Water™ | [
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| Glucose | Paraffin stamping | Whatman grade 1 paper | PS-MS | 1–500 μmol·L−1 | 2.77 μmol·L−1 | Liquors | [
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| Sunset yellow, Lemon yellow | Cutting | Filter paper | SERS | - | 10−5 M, 10−4 M | Grape juice, orange juice | [
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| Nitrite | Paraffin stamping | JProLab JP 40 filter paper | Colorimetric | 0–100 μM | 5.6 μM | Ham, sausage, preservative water | [
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| Nitrite | Alkylsilane assembling and UV-lithography | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | Colorimetric | 0.156–2.50 mM | - | Processed red cubilose | [
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| Nitrite | Indelible ink contact stamping | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | Colorimetric | - | 0.52 mg·L−1 | - | [
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| Nitrite, Nitrate | Inkjet printing | Whatman No. 1 and No.4 filter papers | Colorimetric | 10–150 μM, 50–1000 μM | 1.0 μM, 19 μM | Tap water, mineral water, pond water | [
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| Pb(II) | Photolithography | Whatman No. 1 chromatography paper | Electrochemical | 0–100 ppb | 1.0 ppb | - | [
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| Hg(II), Cu(II), Cr(VI), Ni(II) | Wax printing | Whatman No. 1 paper | Colorimetric | - | ~0.5–1 ppm | - | [
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| Pb(II), Cd(II) | Cutting | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | Electrochemical | 10–100 ppb | 2.0 ppb, 2.3 ppb | Carbonated electrolyte drinks | [
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| As(III) | Cutting | Whatman filter paper | Colorimetric | - | 1.0 ppb | - | [
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| Pb(II), Cu(II) | Cutting | Whatman filter paper | Colorimetric | - | ≤10.0 ppb for both | - | [
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| Cu(II) | Cutting | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | Colorimetric | 7.8–62.8 μM | 7.8 nM or 0.5 μg·L−1 | Drinking water | [
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| Cu(II) | Wax printing | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | Colorimetric | 0.5–200 ng·mL−1 | 0.3 ng·mL−1 | Drinking water, ground water, tomato, rice | [
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| Cu(II) | Inkjet printing | Whatman No. 4 filter paper | Colorimetric | 0.1–30.0 mg·L−1 | 0.6 mg·L−1 | Hot tap water | [
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| Hg(II) | Wax screen printing | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | Colorimetric | 5–75 ppm | 0.12 ppm | Commercial bottled drinking water, tap water | [
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| Hg(II), Ag(I), NEO | Wax printing | Whatman No. 1 chromatography paper | FL | 0–3 μM, 0–1.75 μM, 0–2 μM | 121 nM, 47 nM, 153 nM | - | [
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| Cu(II), Cr(VI), Ni(II) | Wax patterning | Whatman No. 1 chromatography paper | Colorimetric | - | ≥0.8 mg·L−1, >0.5 mg·L−1, ≥0.5 mg·L−1 | Tap water | [
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| Fe | Photolithography | Advantec No. 51B chromatography paper | Colorimetric | 8.9–89 μM | 3.96 μM | Tap water, river water | [
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| Ethanol | Wax printing | Whatman No. 1 chromatography paper | Electrochemical | 0.1–3 mM | 0.1 mM | Water | [
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| Phenol, Bisphenol A, Dopamine, Catechol, m-Cresol p-Cresol | Cutting by hole punching | Fisherbrand P5 filter paper | Colorimetric | 1–400 μg·L−1, 1–200 μg·L−1, 1–300 μg·L−1, 1–300 μg·L−1, 1–500 μg·L−1, 1–200 μg·L−1 | 0.86 (±0.102) μg·L−1 for each of the phenolic compounds | Tap water, river water | [
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| Bromide, Iodide, Chloride | - | Whatman RC60 regenerated cellulose membrane filter | Electrochemical | 10−4.8–0.1 M for bromide and iodide, 10−4.8–0.6 M for chloride | 10−5 M | Food supplement, seawater, mineral water, tap water, river water | [
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| Iodate | Wax printing | Ahlstrom 319 paper | Colorimetric | 0.8–15 ppm iodine atoms from iodate | 0.8 ppm iodine atoms | Iodized salt | [
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| MC-LR | Wax printing | Whatman No. 1 chromatography paper | Electrochemical | 0.01–200 μg·mL−1 | 0.004 μg·mL−1 | - | [
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| B[a]P | Wax patterning and screen printing | Whatman No. 1 filter paper | ECL | 0.15–12.5 μM | ~150 nM | Chicken skin | [
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