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Battery-free, skin-interfaced microfluidic/electronic systems for simultaneous electrochemical, colorimetric, and volumetric analysis of sweat
Author(s) -
Amay J. Bandodkar,
Philipp Gutruf,
Jungil Choi,
KunHyuck Lee,
Yurina Sekine,
Jonathan T. Reeder,
William J. Jeang,
Alexander J. Aranyosi,
Stephen P. Lee,
Jeffrey B. Model,
Roozbeh Ghaffari,
Chun-Ju Su,
John P. Leshock,
Tyler R. Ray,
Anthony Verrillo,
Kyle Thomas,
Vaishnavi Krishnamurthi,
Seungyong Han,
Jeonghyun Kim,
Siddharth Krishnan,
Tao Hang,
John A. Rogers
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aav3294
Subject(s) - microfluidics , sweat , battery (electricity) , computer science , chromatography , computer hardware , chemistry , materials science , nanotechnology , medicine , power (physics) , physics , quantum mechanics
Wearable sweat sensors rely either on electronics for electrochemical detection or on colorimetry for visual readout. Non-ideal form factors represent disadvantages of the former, while semiquantitative operation and narrow scope of measurable biomarkers characterize the latter. Here, we introduce a battery-free, wireless electronic sensing platform inspired by biofuel cells that integrates chronometric microfluidic platforms with embedded colorimetric assays. The resulting sensors combine advantages of electronic and microfluidic functionality in a platform that is significantly lighter, cheaper, and smaller than alternatives. A demonstration device simultaneously monitors sweat rate/loss, pH, lactate, glucose, and chloride. Systematic studies of the electronics, microfluidics, and integration schemes establish the key design considerations and performance attributes. Two-day human trials that compare concentrations of glucose and lactate in sweat and blood suggest a potential basis for noninvasive, semi-quantitative tracking of physiological status.

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