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A miniaturized optoelectronic system for rapid quantitative label-free detection of harmful species in food

Authors :
Eleni Makarona
Willem Haasnoot
Konstantinos Misiakos
Ioannis Raptis
Amadeo R. Fernández-Alba
Panagiota S. Petrou
Alexandros Salapatas
A. Botsialas
Sotirios E. Kakabakos
Michelle Lees
G. Jobst
Evangelos Valamontes
Source :
Frontiers in Biological Detection: From Nanosensors to Systems VIII. SPIE, Frontiers in Biological Detection: From Nanosensors to Systems VIII
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
SPIE, 2016.

Abstract

Optical biosensors have emerged in the past decade as the most promising candidates for portable, highly-sensitive bioanalytical systems that can be employed for in-situ measurements. In this work, a miniaturized optoelectronic system for rapid, quantitative, label-free detection of harmful species in food is presented. The proposed system has four distinctive features that can render to a powerful tool for the next generation of Point-of-Need applications, namely it accommodates the light sources and ten interferometric biosensors on a single silicon chip of a less-than-40mm2 footprint, each sensor can be individually functionalized for a specific target analyte, the encapsulation can be performed at the wafer-scale, and finally it exploits a new operation principle, Broad-band Mach-Zehnder Interferometry to ameliorate its analytical capabilities. Multi-analyte evaluation schemes for the simultaneous detection of harmful contaminants, such as mycotoxins, allergens and pesticides, proved that the proposed system is capable of detecting within short time these substances at concentrations below the limits imposed by regulatory authorities, rendering it to a novel tool for the near-future food safety applications.

Details

Language :
English
ISBN :
978-1-62841-959-7
ISBNs :
9781628419597
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Biological Detection: From Nanosensors to Systems VIII. SPIE, Frontiers in Biological Detection: From Nanosensors to Systems VIII
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4f03217083d91ea46051e03d75f47ee2