Engineering Proceedings (Nov 2022)

Arduino-Based Sensing Platform for Rapid, Low-Cost, and High-Sensitivity Detection and Quantification of Analytes in Fluidic Samples

  • Derek Hayden,
  • Sergio Anacleto,
  • Daphne-Eleni Archonta,
  • Nour Khalil,
  • Antonia Pennella,
  • Shadan Qureshi,
  • Alexandre Séguin,
  • Nima Tabatabaei

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ecsa-9-13277
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 1
p. 69

Abstract

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Lateral flow assays (LFAs; aka. rapid tests) are inexpensive paper-based devices for rapid and specific detection of analyte of interest (e.g., COVID virus) in fluidic samples. Areas of application of LFAs cover a broad spectrum, spanning from agriculture to food/water safety to point-of-care medical testing and, most recently, to detection of COVID-19 infection. While these low-cost and rapid tests are specific to the target analyte, their sensitivity and limit of detection are far inferior to their laboratory-based counterparts. In addition, rapid tests normally cannot quantify the concentration of target analyte and only provide qualitative/binary detection. We have developed a low-cost, end-user sensing platform that significantly improves the sensitivity of rapid tests. The developed platform is based on Arduino and utilizes low-cost far infrared, single-element detectors to offer sensitive and semi-quantitative results from commercially available rapid tests. The sensing paradigm integrated to the low-cost device is based on radiometric detection of photothermal responses of rapid tests in the frequency domain when exposed to modulated laser excitation. As a proof of principle, we studied commercially available rapid tests for detection of THC (the principal psychoactive constituent of cannabis) in oral fluid with different concentrations of control positive solutions and, subsequently, interpret them with the developed sensor. Results suggest that the developed end-user sensor is not only able to improve the detection limit of the rapid test by approximately an order of magnitude from 25 ng/mL to 5 ng/mL, but also offers the ability to obtain semi-quantitative insight into concentration of THC in the fluidic samples.

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