Tag Archives: Korea Institute of Science and Technology

Glucose-sensing contact lens invented by US and Korean researchers

Blood tests for glucose levels may one day be a feature of the past according to an Oct. 3, 2016 news item on ScienceDaily,

Blood testing is the standard option for checking glucose levels, but a new technology could allow non-invasive testing via a contact lens that samples glucose levels in tears.

“There’s no noninvasive method to do this,” said Wei-Chuan Shih, a researcher with the University of Houston [UH] who worked with colleagues at UH and in Korea to develop the project, described in the high-impact journal Advanced Materials. “It always requires a blood draw. This is unfortunately the state of the art.”

A Sept. 27, 2016 UH news release (also on EurekAlert) by Jeannie Kever, which originated the news item, describes the proposed technology,

… glucose is a good target for optical sensing, and especially for what is known as surface-enhanced Raman scattering spectroscopy [also known as surface-enhanced Raman scattering or surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy, and SERS], said Shih, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering whose lab, the NanoBioPhotonics Group, works on optical biosensing enabled by nanoplasmonics.

This is an alternative approach, in contrast to a Raman spectroscopy-based noninvasive glucose sensor Shih developed as a Ph.D. student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He holds two patents for technologies related to directly probing skin tissue using laser light to extract information about glucose concentrations.

The paper describes the development of a tiny device, built from multiple layers of gold nanowires stacked on top of a gold film and produced using solvent-assisted nanotransfer printing, which optimized the use of surface-enhanced Raman scattering to take advantage of the technique’s ability to detect small molecular samples.

Surface-enhanced Raman scattering – named for Indian physicist C.V. Raman [Raman scattering; SERS history begins in 1973 according to its Wikipedia entry], who discovered the effect in 1928 – uses information about how light interacts with a material to determine properties of the molecules that make up the material.

The device enhances the sensing properties of the technique by creating “hot spots,” or narrow gaps within the nanostructure which intensified the Raman signal, the researchers said.

Researchers created the glucose sensing contact lens to demonstrate the versatility of the technology. The contact lens concept isn’t unheard of – Google has submitted a patent for a multi-sensor contact lens, which the company says can also detect glucose levels in tears – but the researchers say this technology would also have a number of other applications.

“It should be noted that glucose is present not only in the blood but also in tears, and thus accurate monitoring of the glucose level in human tears by employing a contact-lens-type sensor can be an alternative approach for noninvasive glucose monitoring,” the researchers wrote.

“Everyone knows tears have a lot to mine,” Shih said. “The question is, whether you have a detector that is capable of mining it, and how significant is it for real diagnostics.”

In addition to Shih, authors on the paper include Yeon Sik Jung, Jae Won Jeong and Kwang-Min Baek, all with the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology; Seung Yong Lee of the Korea Institute of Science and Technology, and Md Masud Parvez Arnob of UH.

Although non-invasive glucose sensing is just one potential application of the technology, Shih said it provided a good way to prove the technology. “It’s one of the grand challenges to be solved,” he said. “It’s a needle in a haystack challenge.”

Scientists know that glucose is present in tears, but Shih said how tear glucose levels correlate with blood glucose levels hasn’t been established. The more important finding, he said, is that the structure is an effective mechanism for using surface-enhanced Raman scattering spectroscopy.

Although traditional nanofabrication techniques rely on a hard substrate – usually glass or a silicon wafer – Shih said researchers wanted a flexible nanostructure, which would be more suited to wearable electronics. The layered nanoarray was produced on a hard substrate but lifted off and printed onto a soft contact, he said.

Here’s a link to and a citation for the paper,

Wafer Scale Phase-Engineered 1T- and 2H-MoSe2/Mo Core–Shell 3D-Hierarchical Nanostructures toward Efficient Electrocatalytic Hydrogen Evolution Reaction by Yindong Qu, Henry Medina, Sheng-Wen Wang, Yi-Chung Wang, Chia-Wei Chen, Teng-Yu Su, Arumugam Manikandan, Kuangye Wang, Yu-Chuan Shih, Je-Wei Chang, Hao-Chung Kuo, Chi-Yung Lee, Shih-Yuan Lu, Guozhen Shen, Zhiming M. Wang, and Yu-Lun Chueh. Advanced Materials DOI: 10.1002/adma.201602697 Version of Record online: 26 SEP 2016

© 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim

This paper is behind a paywall.

Cutting carbon nanotubes

I’ve been meaning to get to this news item about cutting carbon nanotubes for a few days. From the Dec. 17, 2010 news item on Nanowerk,

“We can now design the cutting rate and the diameters we want to cut,” said Kyung-Suk Kim, professor of engineering in the School of Engineering at Brown and the corresponding author on the paper.

The basics of carbon nanotube manufacturing are known. Single-atom thin graphene sheets are immersed in solution (usually water), causing them to look like a plate of tangled spaghetti. The jumbled bundle of nanotubes is then blasted by high-intensity sound waves that create cavities (or partial vacuums) in the solution. The bubbles that arise from these cavities expand and collapse so violently that the heat in each bubble’s core can reach more than 5,000 degrees Kelvin, close to the temperature on the surface of the sun. Meanwhile, each bubble compresses at an acceleration 100 billion times greater than gravity. Considering the terrific energy involved, it’s hardly surprising that the tubes come out at random lengths. Technicians use sieves to get tubes of the desired length. The technique is inexact partly because no one was sure what caused the tubes to fracture.

German researchers had hypothesized that the tube fractures were due to the action of sonic boomlets yanking the tubes apart violently (like taking hold of the two opposite ends of a rope and pulling the rope apart from each end so that it breaks somewhere along its length). Apparently, this was not the case,

They [researchers from Brown University and Korea Institute of Science and Technology] found that rather than being pulled apart, as the German researchers had thought, the tubes were being compressed mightily from both ends. This caused a buckling in a roughly five-nanometer section along the tubes called the compression-concentration zone. In that zone, the tube is twisted into alternating 90-degree-angle folds, so that it fairly resembles a helix.

That discovery still did not explain fully how the tubes are cut. Through more computerized simulations, the group learned the mighty force exerted by the bubbles’ sonic booms caused atoms to be shot off the tube’s lattice-like foundation like bullets from a machine gun.

“It’s almost as if an orange is being squeezed, and the liquid is shooting out sideways,” Kim said. “This kind of fracture by compressive atom ejection has never been observed before in any kind of materials.”

Here’s where the paper was published and why they hope this is an important discovery,

In a paper published this month in the British journal Proceedings of the Royal Society A, researchers at Brown University and in Korea document for the first time how single-walled carbon nanotubes are cut, a finding that could lead to producing more precise, higher-quality nanotubes. Such manufacturing improvements likely would make the nanotubes more attractive for use in automotive, biomedicine, electronics, energy, optics and many other fields.

I didn’t see any projections for when these “more precise, higher-quality nanotubes” might reach the marketplace. It seems to me that they aren’t that sure about the prospects.