Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (519)
- Conference Proceeding (48)
- Part of a Book (10)
- Book (2)
- Other (2)
- Patent (1)
- Report (1)
Has Fulltext
- no (583) (remove)
Keywords
- LAPS (4)
- Field-effect sensor (3)
- Light-addressable potentiometric sensor (3)
- hydrogen peroxide (3)
- Bacillus atrophaeus (2)
- Raman spectroscopy (2)
- field-effect sensor (2)
- tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) (2)
- (Bio)degradation (1)
- Bacillus atrophaeus spores (1)
- Biomolecular logic gate (1)
- CNOT (1)
- Calorimetric gas sensor (1)
- Capacitive field-effect (1)
- Capacitive model (1)
- Chemical images (1)
- Chemical imaging (1)
- Chemical imaging sensor (1)
- Chemical sensor (1)
- Coat protein (1)
- C–V method (1)
- DNA (1)
- DNA biosensor (1)
- DNA hybridization (1)
- DPA (dipicolinic acid) (1)
- Dehydrogenase (1)
- Diaphorase (1)
- EIS capacitive sensor (1)
- Electrolyte–insulator–semiconductor (1)
- Enzymatic biosensor (1)
- Enzyme biosensor (1)
- Enzyme coverage (1)
- Enzyme logic gate (1)
- Enzyme nanocarrier (1)
- Field effect (1)
- Field-effect biosensor (1)
- Field-effect device (1)
- Glucose biosensor (1)
- Glucose oxidase (1)
- Gold nanoparticle (1)
- Hydrogen peroxide (1)
- Impedance spectroscopy (1)
- Label-free detection (1)
- Layer-by-layer adsorption (1)
- LbL films (1)
- Light-addressable Potentiometric Sensor (1)
- MOS (1)
- Multianalyte detection (1)
- Negative impedance convertor (1)
- O2 plasma (1)
- Organic light-emitting diode display (1)
- Penicillin (1)
- Poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (1)
- Poly(d,l-lacticacid) (1)
- Polyimide (1)
- Potentiometry (1)
- Real-time monitoring (1)
- Resonance-mode measurement (1)
- Simultaneous determination (1)
- Sn₃O₄ (1)
- Sterilisation process (1)
- TMV adsorption (1)
- Ta₂O₅ gate (1)
- Tobacco mosaic virus (1)
- Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) (1)
- XOR (1)
- acetoin (1)
- annealing (1)
- artificial olfactory image (1)
- barium strontium titanate (1)
- biosensor (1)
- biosensors (1)
- calorimetric gas sensor (1)
- calorimetric gas sensor;hydrogen peroxide;wireless sensor system (1)
- capacitive field-effect biosensor (1)
- capacitive field-effect sensor (1)
- catalytic metal (1)
- chemical sensor (1)
- contactless conductivity sensor (1)
- electrolyte-insulator semiconductor sensor (EIS) (1)
- electronic nose (1)
- endospores (1)
- enzymatic (bio)degradation (1)
- enzyme cascade (1)
- enzyme immobilization (1)
- field-effect structure (1)
- gas sensor (1)
- glucose oxidase (GOx) (1)
- heavy metals (1)
- high-k material (1)
- horseradish peroxidase (HRP) (1)
- hydroxylation (1)
- immobilization (1)
- impedance spectroscopy (1)
- in-situ monitoring (1)
- lable-free detection (1)
- light-addressable potentiometric sensor (1)
- light-addressing technologies (1)
- metal-oxide-semiconductor structure (1)
- multi-functional material (1)
- nanobelts (1)
- novel photoexcitation method (1)
- optical sensor setup (1)
- optical spore trapping (1)
- optical trapping (1)
- organosilanes (1)
- plant virus detection (1)
- plug-based microfluidic device (1)
- poly(d, l-lactic acid) (1)
- scanned light pulse technique (1)
- silanization (1)
- spatial resolution (1)
- sterilisation (1)
- sterilization (1)
- sterilization conditions (1)
- surface functionalization (1)
- temperature (1)
- tilted constant illumination (1)
- turnip vein clearing virus (TVCV) (1)
- visualization (1)
Institute
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (583) (remove)
The chemical imaging sensor is a device to visualize the spatial distribution of chemical species based on the principle of LAPS (light-addressable potentiometric sensor), which is a field-effect chemical sensor based on semiconductor. In this study, the chemical imaging sensor has been applied to investigate the ion profile of laminar flows in a microfluidic channel. The chemical images (pH maps) were collected in a Y-shaped microfluidic channel while injecting HCl and NaCl solutions into two branches. From the chemical images, it was clearly observed that the injected solutions formed laminar flows in the channel. In addition, ion diffusion across the laminar flows was observed, and the diffusion coefficient could be derived by fitting the pH profiles to the Fick's equation.
High-k perovskite oxide of barium strontium titanate (BST) represents a very attractive multi-functional transducer material for the development of (bio-)chemical sensors for liquids. In this work, BST films have been applied as a sensitive transducer material for a label-free detection of adsorbed charged macromolecules (positively charged polyelectrolytes) and concentration of hydrogen peroxide vapor as well as protection insulator layer for a contactless electrolyte-conductivity sensor. The experimental results of characterization of individual sensors are presented. Special emphasis is devoted towards the development of a capacitively-coupled contactless electrolyte-conductivity sensor.
Chemische Sensoren mit Bariumstrontiumtitanat als funktionelle Schicht zur Multiparameterdetektion
(2013)
A microfluidic chip integrating amperometric enzyme sensors for the detection of glucose, glutamate and glutamine in cell-culture fermentation processes has been developed. The enzymes glucose oxidase, glutamate oxidase and glutaminase were immobilized by means of cross-linking with glutaraldehyde on platinum thin-film electrodes integrated within a microfluidic channel. The biosensor chip was coupled to a flow-injection analysis system for electrochemical characterization of the sensors. The sensors have been characterized in terms of sensitivity, linear working range and detection limit. The sensitivity evaluated from the respective peak areas was 1.47, 3.68 and 0.28 μAs/mM for the glucose, glutamate and glutamine sensor, respectively. The calibration curves were linear up to a concentration of 20 mM glucose and glutamine and up to 10 mM for glutamate. The lower detection limit amounted to be 0.05 mM for the glucose and glutamate sensor, respectively, and 0.1 mM for the glutamine sensor. Experiments in cell-culture medium have demonstrated a good correlation between the glutamate, glutamine and glucose concentrations measured with the chip-based biosensors in a differential-mode and the commercially available instrumentation. The obtained results demonstrate the feasibility of the realized microfluidic biosensor chip for monitoring of bioprocesses.
A chip-based amperometric biosensor referring on using the bioelectrocatalytical amplification principle for the detection of low adrenaline concentrations is presented. The adrenaline biosensor has been prepared by modification of a platinum thin-film electrode with an enzyme membrane containing the pyrroloquinoline quinone-dependent glucose dehydrogenase and glutaraldehyde. Measuring conditions such as temperature, pH value, and glucose concentration have been optimized to achieve a high sensitivity and a low detection limit of about 1 nM adrenaline measured in phosphate buffer at neutral pH value. The response of the biosensor to different catecholamines has also been proven. Long-term stability of the adrenaline biosensor has been studied over 10 days. In addition, the biosensor has been successfully applied for adrenaline detection in human blood plasma for future biomedical applications. Furthermore, preliminary experiments have been carried to detect the adrenaline-concentration difference measured in peripheral blood and adrenal venous blood, representing the adrenal vein sampling procedure of a physician.