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Metabolite detection using organic electronic devices for point-of-care diagnostics / Réalisation de dispositifs électroniques organiques pour la détection des métabolites.Pappa, Anna maria 12 September 2017 (has links)
De nos jours, efficacité et précision des diagnostics médicaux sont des éléments essentiels pour la prévention en termes de santé et permettre une prise en charge rapide des maladies des patients. Les récentes innovations technologiques, particulièrement dans les domaines de la microélectronique et des sciences des matériaux ont permis le développement de nouvelles plateformes personnalisées de diagnostics portatifs. Les matériaux électroniques organiques qui ont déjà par le passé démontré leur potentiel en étant intégrés dans des produits de grande consommation tels que les écrans de smartphones ou encore les cellules solaires montrent un fort potentiel pour une intégration dans des dispositifs biomédicaux. En effet, de par leurs natures et leurs propriétés physiques et chimiques, ils peuvent être à la fois en contact avec les milieux biologiques et constituer l’interface entre les éléments biologiques à l’étude, et les dispositifs électroniques. L’objectif de mes travaux de thèse et d’étudier et évaluer les performances des matériaux organiques électroniques intégrés dans des dispositifs biomédicaux en étudiant leurs interactions avec des milieux biologiques et par l’utilisation et l’optimisation de ces dispositifs permettre la détection de métabolites tel que le glucose ou lactate par exemple. Pendant ma thèse, j’ai notamment créé une plateforme de diagnostics combinant à la fois microfluidique et électronique organique permettant la multi détection de métabolites présents dans des fluides corporels humains, j’ai également conçu des capteurs intégrant des transistors organiques au sein des circuits électroniques classiques afin de détecter la présence des cellules tumorales. D’autres applications biologiques ont également été envisagées telles que la détection d’acides nucléiques par l’utilisation d’une approche simple de biofonctionnalisation. Bien que l’objectif ma thèse était de de créer des capteurs biomédicaux en utilisant une approche in vitro, il pourrait être également possible d’intégrer ces dispositifs « in vivo » ou encore dans des e-textiles. / Rapid and early diagnosis of disease plays a major role in preventative healthcare. Undoubtedly, technological evolutions, particularly in microelectronics and materials science, have made the hitherto utopian scenario of portable, point-of-care personalized diagnostics a reality. Organic electronic materials, having already demonstrated a significant technological maturity with the development of high tech products such as displays for smartphones or portable solar cells, have emerged as especially promising candidates for biomedical applications. Their soft and fuzzy nature allows for an almost seamless interface with the biological milieu rendering these materials ideally capable of bridging the gap between electronics and biology. The aim of this thesis is to explore and validate the capabilities of organic electronic materials and devices in real-world biological sensing applications focusing on metabolite sensing, by combining both the right materials and device engineering. We show proof-of-concept studies including microfluidic integrated organic electronic platforms for multiple metabolite detection in bodily fluids, as well as more complex organic transistor circuits for detection in tumor cell cultures. We finally show the versatility of organic electronic materials and devices by demonstrating other sensing strategies such as nucleic acid detection using a simple biofunctionalization approach. Although the focus is on in vitro metabolite monitoring, the findings generated throughout this work can be extended to a variety of other sensing strategies as well as to applications including on body (wearable) or even in vivo sensing.
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Printable Biosensors based on Organic Electrochemical Transistors with a Platinized Gate Electrode / Tryckbara biosensorer baserade på organiska elektrokemiska transistorer med en platinerad gate-elektrodBroman, Eva January 2012 (has links)
There is a great demand for low-cost disposable sensors in a variety of markets, such as the food chainand health care. No assay is performed more than that of glucose and approximately 85 % of the entirebiosensor market accounts for glucose biosensors. Each year, 6 billion glucose assays are performed andthe majority of them are based on electrochemical detection. Organic electrochemical transistors(OECTs) have favorable properties in terms of low operating voltages and have previously been used asbase for electrochemical detection of glucose. A low-cost disposable biosensor can be achieved by theuse of high throughput printing techniques. Up until now, no printable biosensors based on organic electrochemicaltransistors have been developed. In this thesis a printable miniaturized prototype for a glucose biosensor based on an OECT with a platinizedgate electrode has been designed, developed and evaluated. The biosensor has been functionalizedwith the enzyme glucose oxidase. Different platinum deposition techniques have been used to depositplatinum onto the printed carbon gate electrode: electrodeposition, platinum nanoparticle solutiondeposited either by inkjet printing or pipetting and thermal evaporation. The gate electrodes were characterized with cyclic voltammetry in hydrogen peroxide, ferricyanide andglucose. The characterizations revealed no significant differences between the different deposition techniques.However, with gate electrodes produced by printed carbon followed by electrodeposition ofplatinum it was possible to sense glucose in a concentration in the range of the values for diabetic persons.Thus, the electrodes are a promising option as gate electrodes in a glucose biosensor based on anOECT. The characteristics of the OECT revealed that the responses resembled a transistor.
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An Organic Electrochemical Transistor for Printed Sensors and LogicNilsson, David January 2005 (has links)
Conducting polymers entered the research field in late 70´s and efforts aimed at achieving printed electronics started a decade later. This thesis treats printable organic electrochemical transistors (OECT). Some conjugated polymers can be switched between a high conducting and a low conducting state in an electrochemical cell. In this thesis, the work carried out using poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) as the active material in an electrochemical transistor is reported. The electrochemical transistors, presented, can be designed into a bi-stable and dynamic mode of operation. These transistors operates at voltages below 2V and current on/off ratios are typically 5000, but 105 have been reached. The transistor device can be built up from all-organic materials using common printing techniques such as with screen-printing. The bi-stable transistor can be combined with an electrochromic (EC) display cell to form a smart pixel circuit. Combining several of these smart pixels yield an actively addressed cross-point matrix display. From this an all-organic active matrix display printable on paper has been achieved. The OECT, combined with a resistor network was successfully used in inverter and logic circuits. One important feature of these organic electrochemical devices is that both ions and electrons are used as the charge (signal) carriers. This is of particular interest and importance for chemical sensors. By combining a proton-conducting electrolyte (Nafion®) that changes its conductivity upon exposure to humidity, a simple OECT humidity sensor was achieved. This proves the use of this OECT as the ion-to-electron transducer.
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Organic Electrochemical Transistors for Fast Scan Cyclic VoltammetryKollipara, Suresh Babu January 2013 (has links)
The work presented in the thesis is about the evaluation of Organic Electrochemical Transistors (OECTs) for fast scan cyclic voltammetry (FSCV). FSCV is a method which has been used for real time dopamine sensing both in vivo and in vitro. The method is sensitive to noise and could therefore benefit from signal preamplification at the point of sensing, which could be achieved by incorporation of OECTs. In this study the OECTs are based on the conductive polymer poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS). The gate consists of gold microelectrodes of different sizes to be used one at a time. When dopamine is reacted at the gate electrode, the redox state of the PEDOT:PSS OECT channel is modulated and the resulting change in drain current can be measured. The gate current, which contains the sensing information, is after filtering obtained by differentiating the channel potential with respect to time. The derived gate current is plotted in cyclic voltammogram for different dopamine concentrations and the amplitude of the oxidation/reduction peaks can be used to determine the dopamine concentration. In this thesis for the first time it is demonstrated that OECTs can be used for FSCV detection of dopamine. The results are discussed and an outlook on future work is given.
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Acceptor Moieties With Extended Conjugation For Semiconducting PolymersXuyi Luo (12463584) 27 April 2022 (has links)
<p>New acceptor moieties with extended conjugation have been developed for further understanding of structure-property relationships in donor-acceptor type semiconducting polymers. These diketopyrrolopyrrole or isoindigo based conjugated polymers have been demonstrated as functional materials in organic field effect transistors, photoacoustic imaging and organic electrochemical transistors. With demonstrations of semiconducting molecular design, we hope to spark new research directions especially on deeper investigation of charge transport dependence on chemical structures, and new design strategies of acceptor moieties with extended conjugation could be applied for targeted applications.</p>
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Ionic Electroactive Polymers and Liquid Crystal Elastomers for Applications in Soft Robotics, Energy Harvesting, Sensing and Organic Electrochemical TransistorsRajapaksha, Chathuranga Prageeth Hemantha 25 April 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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Characterisation of Poly(trimethylene carbonate) and f-BTI2g-TVTCN blends for the use in Biosensors / Karakterisering av poly(trimetylenkarbonat) och f-BTI2g-TVTCN blandningar för användning inom biosensorerEl Ghamri, Sara, Kammeby, Ed, Göransson, Herman, Stjerngren, Arvid January 2023 (has links)
This report aims to study the degradation of poly(trimethylene carbonate) (PTMC) caused by the enzyme carboxylesterase in vitro. As well as to characterise polymer blends of f-BTI2g-TVTCN and poly(3-hydroxybutyric acid) as core components for organic electrochemical transistors (OETCs). This is to assess the suitability of these polymers in biodegradable biosensors. The degradation study of PTMC showed a lack of degradation in contrast to previous studies performed on the material; previous studies recorded a mass loss of between (5-8)% after two months. The cause for this discrepancy is still unknown but the evidence points to both systematic faults in the gravimetric analysis as well as random errors found in the equipment. The OECT showed that increasing the PHB fraction in the polymer blend resulted in a higher output. The most stable device consisted of a 1:6 blend of f-BTI2g-TVTCN to PHB. Fewer tests were conducted on the 1:10 blend because two devices were damaged during the experiment. The statistical impact of the smaller sample size cannot be overstated so further testing should be conducted to verify the results.
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Organic Implantable Probes for in vivo Recordings of Electrophysciological Activity and Drug Delivery / Sondes organiques implantables pour l’enregistrement in vivo de l’activité électrophysiologique et le relarguage de droguesUguz, Ilke 21 November 2016 (has links)
L’enregistrement et la stimulation in vivo de l’activité neuronale peuvent aussi bien servir pour la recherche médicale que pour les interfaces cerveau-machine. Les dispositifs à base d’électronique organique sont de prometteurs candidats pour ce faire, grâce à leur flexibilité et leur biocompatibilité. Le contrôle local de l’activité neuronale est la clé de nombreuses stratégies thérapeutiques visant à traiter les troubles neurologiques. Une solution idéale serait donc de fabriquer un dispositif capable de détecter l’activité neuronale et, en réponse, d’injecter des molécules endogènes. L’un des objectifs de cette thèse est de s’attaquer à cette problématique à l’aide d’un dispositif permettant à la fois de stimuler les cellules, et de mesurer l’activité neuronale, au même endroit, à l’échelle cellulaire. Nous présentons un dispositif organique capable de délivrer précisément des neurotransmetteurs in vitro et in vivo. En convertissant un signal électrique en la délivrance de neurotransmetteurs, le dispositif mime le fonctionnement d’une synapse. Le neurotransmetteur inhibiteur, l’acide γ- aminobutyrique (GABA), est relargué au niveau des électrodes d’enregistrement par l’activation d’une pompe ionique électronique. L’injection du GABA engendre l’arrêt de l’activité épileptique qui a été enregistré au niveau des électrodes. Des dispositifs multifonctionnels ouvrent de nombreuses possibilités, incluant des dispositifs thérapeutiques avec des boucles de retour, avec lesquels l’enregistrement local de signaux régule la délivrance d’agents thérapeutiques. De plus, nous avons également réalisé pendant cette thèse l’intégration de transistors organiques sur un film organique ultra fin, pour mesurer les signaux électrophysiologiques in vivo à la surface d’un cerveau de rat. Le dispositif, implanté de façon épidurale, montre des résultats surpassant certains dispositifs subduraux de taille similaire, permettant ainsi une approche moins invasive et efficace pour mesurer l’activité neuronale. / Recordings and stimulation of in vivo neural activity are necessary for diagnostic purposes and for brain-machine interfaces. Organic electronic devices constitute a promising candidate due to their mechanical flexibility and biocompatibility. Local control of neuronal activity is central to many therapeutic strategies aiming to treat neurological disorders. Arguably, the best solution would make use of endogenous highly localized and specialized regulatory mechanisms of neuronal activity, and an ideal therapeutic technology should sense activity and deliver endogenous molecules simultaneously to achieve the most efficient feedback regulation. Thus, there is a need for novel devices to specifically interface nerve cells. Here, we demonstrate an organic electronic device capable of precisely delivering neurotransmit- ters in vitro and in vivo. In converting electronic addressing into delivery of neurotransmit- ters, the device mimics the nerve synapse. The inhibitory neurotransmitter, -aminobutyric acid (GABA), was actively delivered and stopped epileptiform activity, recorded simultaneously and colocally. These multifunctional devices create a range of opportunities, including implantable therapeutic devices with automated feedback, where locally recorded signals regulate local release of specific therapeutic agents. In addition, we demonstrate the engineering of an organic electrochemical transistor embedded in an ultrathin organic film designed to record electrophysiological signals on the surface of the brain. The device was applied in vivo and epidurally implanted could reach capabilities beyond similar sized electrodes allowing minimally invasive monitoring of brain activity.
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Thermodynamics of organic electrochemical transistorsCucchi, Matteo, Weissbach, Anton, Bongartz, Lukas M., Kantelberg, Richard, Tseng, Hsin, Kleemann, Hans, Leo, Karl 05 March 2024 (has links)
Despite their increasing usefulness in a wide variety of applications, organic electrochemical transistors still lack a comprehensive and unifying physical framework able to describe the current-voltage characteristics and the polymer/electrolyte interactions simultaneously. Building upon thermodynamic axioms, we present a quantitative analysis of the operation of organic electrochemical transistors. We reveal that the entropy of mixing is the main driving force behind the redox mechanism that rules the transfer properties of such devices in electrolytic environments. In the light of these findings, we show that traditional models used for organic electrochemical transistors, based on the theory of field-effect transistors, fall short as they treat the active material as a simple capacitor while ignoring the material properties and energetic interactions. Finally, by analyzing a large spectrum of solvents and device regimes, we quantify the entropic and enthalpic contributions and put forward an approach for targeted material design and device applications.
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Threshold Voltage Control in Dual-Gate Organic Electrochemical TransistorsTseng, Hsin, Weissbach, Anton, Kucinski, Juzef, Solgi, Ali, Nair, Rakesh, Bongartz, Lukas M., Ciccone, Giuseppe, Cucchi, Matteo, Leo, Karl, Kleemann, Hans 01 March 2024 (has links)
Organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) based on Poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulfonic acid) (PEDOT:PSS) are a benchmark system in organic bioelectronics. In particular, the superior mechanical properties and the ionic-electronic transduction yield excellent potential for the field of implantable or wearable sensing technology. However, depletion-mode operation PEDOT:PSS-based OECTs cause high static power dissipation in electronic circuits, limiting their application in electronic systems. Hence, having control over the threshold voltage is of utmost technological importance. Here, PEDOT:PSS-based dual-gate OECTs with solid-state electrolyte where the threshold voltage is seamlessly adjustable during operation are demonstrated. It is shown that the degree of threshold voltage tuning linearly depends on the gate capacitance, which is a straightforward approach for circuit designers to adjust the threshold voltage only by the device dimensions. The PEDOT:PSS-based dual-gate OECTs show excellent device performance and can be pushed to accumulation-mode operation, resulting in a simplified and relaxed design of complementary inverters.
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