DocumentCode
1358246
Title
Microsensors in Dynamic Backgrounds: Toward Real-Time Breath Monitoring
Author
Benkstein, Kurt D. ; Raman, Baranidharan ; Montgomery, Christopher B. ; Martinez, Carlos J. ; Semancik, Steve
Author_Institution
Nat. Inst. of Stand. & Technol., Gaithersburg, MD, USA
Volume
10
Issue
1
fYear
2010
Firstpage
137
Lastpage
144
Abstract
We evaluated a microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) microsensor array with temperature-controlled chemi-resistive elements for use as a noninvasive clinical diagnostic tool to detect the presence or absence of trace amounts of disease biomarkers in simulated breath samples. The microsensor environment was periodically altered between air (78% N2, 21% O2 by volume, 20% relative humidity) and simulated breath (77% N2, 16% O2, 4% CO2 by volume, 80% relative humidity) samples creating a dynamic background. Acetone, a disease marker for diabetes, was spiked into select simulated breath samples at relevant concentrations ( 0.5 ¿mol/mol to 8 ¿mol/mol) to pose a diagnostic problem for the sensor array. Using standard statistical dimensionality reduction and classification algorithms, we compared the ability of a variety of sensing materials to detect and recognize the disease marker. Our analyses indicate that the porous, doped nanoparticle materials (Sb:SnO2 microshell films and Nb :TiO2 nanoparticle films) are best for the recognition problem (acetone present versus absent), but that WO3 and SnO2 films are better at the quantification task (high versus low concentrations of acetone).
Keywords
antimony; bioMEMS; biomedical equipment; carbon compounds; diseases; gas sensors; humidity; microsensors; nanoparticles; niobium; nitrogen; oxygen; patient diagnosis; pneumodynamics; sensor arrays; statistical analysis; thin film sensors; tin compounds; titanium compounds; tungsten compounds; CO2; N2; O2; SnO2:Sb; TiO2:Nb; acetone; air; diabetes; disease biomarkers; microelectromechanical systems; microsensor array; microshell films; nanoparticle films; noninvasive clinical diagnostic tool; real-time breath monitoring; relative humidity; simulated breath; statistical dimensionality classification; statistical dimensionality reduction; temperature-controlled chemi-resistive elements; Biomarkers; Chemical elements; Diabetes; Diseases; Humidity; Microelectromechanical systems; Micromechanical devices; Microsensors; Monitoring; Sensor arrays; Biological gases; gas detectors; microsensors; multidimensional signal processing; nanotechnology;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Sensors Journal, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1530-437X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JSEN.2009.2035738
Filename
5353800
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