| Literature DB >> 32471087 |
Donni Kis Apriyanto1, Mirza Satriawan2.
Abstract
A CO2 laser has the advantages of being high in power and having many laser lines in the 9-11 µm infrared region. Thus, a CO2 laser photoacoustic spectrometer (PAS) can have a multi-component measurement capability for many gas compounds that have non-zero absorption coefficients at the laser lines, and therefore can be applied for measuring several volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the human breath. We have developed a CO2 laser PAS system for detecting acetone in the human breath. Although acetone has small absorption coefficients at the CO2 laser lines, our PAS system was able to obtain strong photoacoustic (PA) signals at several CO2 laser lines, with the strongest one being at the 10P20 line. Since at the 10P20 line, ethylene and ammonia also have significant absorption coefficients, these two gases have to be included in a multi-component measurement with acetone. We obtained the lowest detection limit of our system for the ethylene, acetone, and ammonia are 6 ppbv, 11 ppbv, and 31 ppbv, respectively. We applied our PAS system to measure these three VOCs in the breath of three groups of subjects, i.e., patients with lung cancer disease, patients with other lung diseases, and healthy volunteers.Entities:
Keywords: CO2 laser photoacoustic; acetone; lung cancer; volatile organic compounds
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32471087 PMCID: PMC7344467 DOI: 10.3390/bios10060055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1Schematic of the CO2 laser photoacoustic spectrometer.
Figure 2The scanning result of the photoacoustic (PA) signal of the acetone.
Figure 3Acetone gas PA signal resonance curve at line 10P20.
Figure 4Linearity curves for the normalized PA signal versus ethylene, acetone, and ammonia concentration at 10P14, 10P20, and 10R14 lines, respectively.
Figure 5The means and the standard deviations of the ethylene, acetone, and ammonia concentrations for all patients in the three groups.
The Student’s t-test result for any two groups for the concentration of acetone, ethylene, and ammonia.
| Groups Compared for Each Gas | T-Test | P-Value | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Lung Cancer vs. Healthy | 4.47714 | 0.000258 | Significant at p < 0.01 |
| Lung Cancer vs. Other Lung Disease | 3.92928 | 0.000983 | Significant at p < 0.01 |
| Healthy vs. Other Lung Disease | 0.53065 | 0.602526 | Not significant at p = 0.05 |
|
| |||
| Lung Cancer vs. Healthy | 0.27623 | 0.785351 | Not significant at p = 0.05 |
| Lung Cancer vs. Other Lung Disease | 0.03193 | 0.974876 | Not significant at p = 0.05 |
| Healthy vs. Other Lung Disease | 0.19831 | 0.845155 | Not significant at p = 0.05 |
|
| |||
| Lung Cancer vs. Healthy | 0.66217 | 0.515817 | Not significant at p = 0.05 |
| Lung Cancer vs. Other Lung Disease | 0.13711 | 0.892466 | Not significant at p = 0.05 |
| Healthy vs. Other Lung Disease | 0.72381 | 0.479025 | Not significant at p = 0.05 |