The researchers demonstrated their approach is capable of rapidly  detecting biomarkers in the parts per billion to parts per million  range, at least 100 times better than previous breath-analysis  technologies, said Carlos Martinez, an assistant professor of materials  engineering at Purdue who is working with researchers at the National  Institute of Standards and Technology.
 This image shows a new type of sensor for an advanced  breath-analysis technology that rapidly diagnoses patients by detecting  "biomarkers" in a person's respiration in real time. Researchers used a  template made of micron-size polymer particles and coated them with much  smaller metal oxide nanoparticles. Using nanoparticle-coated  microparticles instead of a flat surface allows researchers to increase  the porosity of the sensor films, increasing the "active sensing surface  area" to improve sensitivity.
"People have been working in this area for about 30 years but have  not been able to detect low enough concentrations in real time," he  said. "We solved that problem with the materials we developed, and we  are now focusing on how to be very specific, how to distinguish  particular biomarkers."
The technology works by detecting changes in electrical resistance or  conductance as gases pass over sensors built on top of  "microhotplates," tiny heating devices on electronic chips. Detecting  biomarkers provides a record of a patient's health profile, indicating  the possible presence of cancer and other diseases.
"We are talking about creating an inexpensive, rapid way of  collecting diagnostic information about a patient," Martinez said. "It  might say, 'there is a certain percentage that you are metabolizing a  specific compound indicative of this type of cancer,' and then  additional, more complex tests could be conducted to confirm the  diagnosis."
The researchers used the technology to detect acetone, a biomarker  for diabetes, with a sensitivity in the parts per billion range in a gas  mimicking a person's breath.
Findings were detailed in a research paper that appeared earlier this  year in the IEEE Sensors Journal, published by the Institute of  Electrical and Electronics Engineers' IEEE Sensors Council. The paper  was co-authored by Martinez and NIST researchers Steve Semancik, lead  author Kurt D. Benkstein, Baranidharan Raman and Christopher B.  Montgomery.
The researchers used a template made of micron-size polymer particles  and coated them with far smaller metal oxide nanoparticles. Using  nanoparticle-coated microparticles instead of a flat surface allows  researchers to increase the porosity of the sensor films, increasing the  "active sensing surface area" to improve sensitivity.
A droplet of the nanoparticle-coated polymer microparticles was  deposited on each microhotplate, which are about 100 microns square and  contain electrodes shaped like meshing fingers. The droplet dries and  then the electrodes are heated up, burning off the polymer and leaving a  porous metal-oxide film, creating a sensor.
"It's very porous and very sensitive," Martinez said. "We showed that  this can work in real time, using a simulated breath into the device."
Gases passing over the device permeate the film and change its  electrical properties depending on the particular biomarkers contained  in the gas.
Such breathalyzers are likely a decade or longer away from being  realized, in part because precise standards have not yet been developed  to manufacture devices based on the approach, Martinez said.
"However, the fact that we were able to do this in real time is a big  step in the right direction," he said.
From sciencedaily.com



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