| Literature DB >> 33330426 |
Juhong Nam1, Eunjeong Byun1, Hyunji Shim1, Esther Kim1, Sayemul Islam2, Moonchul Park2, Albert Kim2, Seung Hyun Song1.
Abstract
Wireless monitoring of the physio-biochemical information is becoming increasingly important for healthcare. In this work, we present a proof-of-concept hydrogel-based wireless biochemical sensing scheme utilizing ultrasound. The sensing system utilizes silica-nanoparticle embedded hydrogel deposited on a thin glass substrate, which presents two prominent interfaces for ultrasonic backscattering (tissue/glass and hydrogel/glass). To overcome the effect of the varying acoustic properties of the intervening biological tissues between the sensor and the external transducer, we implemented a differential mode of ultrasonic back-scattering. Here, we demonstrate a wireless pH measurement with a resolution of 0.2 pH level change and a wireless sensing range around 10 cm in a water tank.Entities:
Keywords: biochemical sensing; hydrogel; implantable sensor devices; ultrasonic; wireless sensing
Year: 2020 PMID: 33330426 PMCID: PMC7729131 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2020.596370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1(A) Schematic illustration of a proposed sensor system application. (B) Operation principle of the differential ultrasonic biochemical sensor.
Figure 2Sensor fabrication steps and resulting sensor. (A–C) Schematic illustration of the sensor fabrication of the hydrogel deposition (A), laser patterning of the dehydrated hydrogel (B), and the resulting patterned hydrogel surface (C). Optical photograph of the fabricated dehydrated hydrogel (D).Photograph of the prototype device with a overall dimension of 2 × 4 × 0.5 mm (E).
Figure 3(A) Schematic depiction of the ultrasonic measurement of pH sensor, (B) representative photo of the experimental setup.
Figure 4Swelling ratio as a function of silica-loading concentration: (A) optical photographs of the silica-loaded cuboid at different pH and (B) normalized dimension of the hydrogel as a function of pH.
Figure 5Volumetric response of silica-loaded hydrogel sensor (A) optical photographs of the patterned hydrogel at different pH levels (scale bar length = 1 mm) (B) the thickness (μm) and the area per block (mm2) as a function of pH.
Figure 6(A) The representative waveform of control and sensor (pH 3 and pH 5), (B) peak voltage output of the transducer for the reference and sensor at different pH levels, (C) ratio between the sensor output and reference output as a function of pH. All measurements were repeated five times to obtain the standard error. (D) Attenuation ratio as a function of gel area. The slope fitted via Equation (5) (red line) is approximated to -(1-c).
Figure 7Time evolution data of the ultrasonic hydrogel pH sensor. The shaded background indicates the pH of the buffer solution that the sensor is embedded in red: pH 3, blue: pH 7.