Nederlands

Laser printing on fallen leaves can produce sensors for medical and laboratory use

805
2024-05-16 17:18:22
Bekijk vertaling

The manufacturing of sensors through 3D printing combines speed, design freedom, and the possibility of using waste as a substrate. In the circular economy model, various results have been achieved, and typically discarded residues are used as low-cost resources. A research team in Brazil has proposed a highly creative solution that involves printing electrochemical sensors on fallen leaves. The team is led by Bruno Janegitz, Professor and Head of Sensors, Nanopharmaceuticals and Nanostructured Materials Laboratory (LSNANO) at the Federal University of San Carlos (UFSCar), and Thiago Paix ã o, Professor and Head of Electronic Tongue and Chemical Sensor Laboratory (L2ESQ) at the University of S ã o Paulo (USP). This initiative has received support from FAPESP and was emphasized in an article published in the journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering.

Janegitz said, "We used CO2 (carbon dioxide) lasers to print designs of interest on leaves through pyrolysis and carbonization. Therefore, we obtained an electrochemical sensor for measuring levels of dopamine and paracetamol. It is very easy to operate. A drop of solution containing one of the compounds is placed on the sensor, and a potentiostat connected to it displays the concentration."

Simply put, the laser beam burns the leaves during the pyrolysis process, converting their cellulose into graphite, which is printed on the leaves in a shape suitable for use as a sensor. During the manufacturing process, the parameters of the CO2 laser, including laser power, pyrolysis scanning rate, and scanning gap, are systematically adjusted to obtain the best results.

Janegitz said, "These sensors have been characterized through morphology and physicochemical methods, allowing for a detailed exploration of the new carbonized surfaces generated on the leaves."

"In addition, the applicability of the sensor was confirmed through testing dopamine and paracetamol in biological and drug samples. For dopamine, the system is effective in the linear range of 10-1200 micromoles per liter, with a detection limit of 1.1 micromoles per liter. For paracetamol, the system has a linear range of 5-100 micromoles per liter, with a detection limit of 0.76."

In tests involving dopamine and paracetamol, as a proof of concept, the electrochemical sensor extracted from fallen leaves achieved satisfactory analytical performance and noteworthy reproducibility, highlighting its potential as a substitute for traditional substrates.

Replacing traditional materials with fallen leaves has produced significant benefits in reducing costs and, most importantly, environmental sustainability. Janegitz said, "These leaves would have been incinerated or at best composted. Instead, they are being used as substrates for high-value devices, which is a significant advancement in the manufacturing of next-generation electrochemical sensors."

Source: Laser Net

Gerelateerde aanbevelingen
  • Assisting Gas Mixing to Promote the Development of Fiber Laser Technology

    Just ten years ago, fiber laser cutting machines were considered experts in thin plates. The stores quickly realized that they had to invest in them to compete, at least by reducing their instrument materials. For high-quality sheet metal cutting, CO2 laser is still the way to go. Of course, fiber lasers can cut thicker blanks, but the quality is not very good, and their speed advantage almost dis...

    2024-01-11
    Bekijk vertaling
  • An innovative technology that can make light "bend"

    A research team from the University of Glasgow in the UK drew inspiration from the phenomenon of clouds scattering sunlight and developed an innovative technology that can effectively guide or even "bend" light. This technology is expected to achieve significant breakthroughs in fields such as medical imaging, cooling systems, and even nuclear reactors. The relevant research results were published...

    2024-11-11
    Bekijk vertaling
  • Micro laser opens the door to chip size sensors

    The new device is a frequency comb - a special type of laser that can generate multiple wavelengths of light, each with a fixed frequency interval. On the spectrogram, it looks a bit like the teeth of a comb. In approximately a quarter century since their first development, these "cursor rulers" have completely transformed various high-precision measurements from timing to molecular detection. In ...

    2024-03-13
    Bekijk vertaling
  • Successful First Satellite Earth Laser High Speed Image Transmission Experiment

    Recently, the reporter learned from Changguang Satellite Technology Co., Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as "Changguang Satellite") that the company used a self-developed vehicle mounted laser communication ground station to conduct satellite ground laser high-speed image transmission experiments with the onboard laser communication terminal of the "Jilin No.1" constellation MF02A04 satellite and ac...

    2023-10-14
    Bekijk vertaling
  • The Japanese team uses laser technology for ice core sampling to accurately study climate change

    Recently, a research team from the Astronomical Glaciology Laboratory under the RIKEN Nishina Center (RNC) of the Japanese Institute of Physics and Chemistry announced that they have developed a new laser based sampling system for studying the composition of glacier ice cores.The above image shows the discrete holes sampled 150mm from the shallow ice core of the Fuji Ice Dome in Japan (Southeast ...

    2023-09-23
    Bekijk vertaling