Inkjet-Printed and Paper-Based Electrochemical Sensors

Author:  Tortorich, Ryan P.; Shamkhalichenar, Hamed; Choi, Jin-Woo. 2018.

Publication:  Applied Sciences 2018, Vol. 8, Page 288

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Abstract

It is becoming increasingly more important to provide a low-cost point-of-care diagnostic device with the ability to detect and monitor various biological and chemical compounds. Traditional laboratories can be time-consuming and very costly. Through the combination of well-established materials and fabrication methods, it is possible to produce devices that meet the needs of many patients, healthcare and medical professionals, and environmental specialists. Existing research has demonstrated that inkjet-printed and paper-based electrochemical sensors are suitable for this application due to advantages provided by the carefully selected materials and fabrication method. Inkjet printing provides a low cost fabrication method with incredible control over the material deposition process, while paper-based substrates enable pump-free microfluidic devices due to their natural wicking ability. Furthermore, electrochemical sensing is incredibly selective and provides accurate and repeatable quantitative results without expensive measurement equipment. By merging each of these favorable techniques and materials and continuing to innovate, the production of low-cost point-of-care sensors is certainly within reach.

Cite this article

Tortorich RP, Shamkhalichenar H, Choi J-W. Inkjet-Printed and Paper-Based Electrochemical Sensors. Applied Sciences. 2018; 8(2):288.https://doi.org/10.3390/app8020288

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