| Literature DB >> 32498366 |
Laura Alejandra Ireta-Muñoz1, Eden Morales-Narváez1.
Abstract
Given their photoluminescent character, portable quantum dot readers are often sophisticated and relatively expensive. In response, we engineered a "do it yourself" fluorescence reader employing paper materials and a mid-range smartphone camera. Black paperboard facilitated a versatile, lightweight and foldable case; whereas cellophane paper was observed to behave as a simple, yet effective, optical bandpass filter leading to an advantageous device for the quantitative interrogation of quantum dot nanocrystals concentrations (from 2.5 to 20 nM), which are suitable for optical point-of-care biosensing. The streptavidin-coated nanocrystals employed are commercially available and the developed reader was benchmarked with a standard portable quantum dot reader, thereby demonstrating advantages in terms of cost and linear analytical range.Entities:
Keywords: biosensing; miniaturization; photoluminescence; point-of-care; portable devices
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32498366 PMCID: PMC7345677 DOI: 10.3390/bios10060060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1Pictures of the paper-based quantum dot (QD) reader. (a) External filter holder. (b) Tray to introduce the sample into the reader. (c) Illumination angle control. (d) Universal serial bus (USB) connector to power the excitation source. (e) Moto G5. (f) Paper-based filters.
Figure 2Optical components of the paper-based QD reader and their characterization via ultraviolet–visible (UV–Vis) spectroscopy. (A) Schematic representation of the optical path. (B) UV-Vis behavior of the optical components. (C) Images recorded with different filter configurations. The images were acquired through the smartphone camera.
Figure 3The resulting calibration plots under different paper-based filter configurations and the corresponding images. (A) Red filter. (B) Yellow filter. (C) Red + yellow filter. The error bars represent the standard deviation of two QD spots drop-casted onto lateral flow strips (LFS). The size of the spots is c.a. 3 mm.
Analytical performance of the studied QD readers.
| Configuration | Linear Model | R2 | 1/slope | LOD 1 (nM) | LOQ 2 (nM) | Linear Range (nM) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Red filter | Y = 1.994*X + 185.6 | 0.9455 | 0.5014 | 11.856 | 42.201 | 2.5–20 |
| Yellow filter | Y = 5.206*X + 79.12 | 0.9834 | 0.1921 | 0.918 | 4.744 | 2.5–20 |
| Red + yellow filter | Y = 5.81*X + 69.06 | 0.9892 | 0.1721 | 2.773 | 7.778 | 2.5–20 |
| ESEQuant | Y = 15.98*X − 3.454 | 0.9772 | 0.06256 | 0.303 | 0.314 | 2.5–10 |
1 Limit of detection. 2 Limit of quantification.
Photoluminescence readers for point-of-care applications.
| Reported Price (USD) | Filters/Lens | Smartphone | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8450 | Not specified | – | ESEQuant LR3 |
| 10 1 | No | High-range (iPhone SE or Nexus 5) | [ |
| 5 2 | Yes/Yes | High-range (iPhone 5s) | [ |
| 4.5 3 | Yes/No | Mid-range (Moto G5) | This work |
1 Smartphone not included. 2 Filters, lens and smartphone not included. 3 Paper-based filters included, smartphone not included.