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The soil microenvironment greatly influences a plant’s ability to absorb nutrients and germinate. Sensing these changes in soil medium is critical to understand plant nutrient requirements. Soil being dynamic represents changes in nutrient content, element mobility, texture, water-holding capacity, and microbiota which affects the nutrient levels. These minor changes affect the plant in early growth and development and studying these changes has always been challenging. Microfluidics provides a platform to study nutrient availability and exchange in small volumes of liquid or media resembling plant microenvironments. Here, we have developed a novel microfluidic chip-embedded molecular imprinted sensor for sensing nitrate and phosphate in the media. For data acquisition and recording we have implemented a potentiostat controlled via a microcontroller allowing data storage and transfer via a long-range radio module (LoRA). The microfluidic device’s functionality was validated by germination of the legume crimson red and recoding the nitrate and phosphate levels in media for 7 d. The MIP-based sensor measures nitrate and phosphate, in the range from 1 to 1000 mM. The accuracy of detection for nitrate and phosphate showed 99% and 95% respectively. The chip coupled with MIP based sensor for nutrient analysis serves as a platform technology for studying nitrate and phosphate nutrient exchange and interaction. This chip in the future can be implemented to study plant deficiencies, drought resistance, and plant immunity.more » « less
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High testosterone is associated with increased physical performance in sports due to its stimulation with body-muscle ratio, lean mass (muscle and bone), and bone density. Several studies show athletes with better explosive strength and sprint running performances in football, have a higher basal level of testosterone. The results suggest a relationship between testosterone production and the development of fast-twitch muscle fibers, endurance training, lean mass, resistance training in athletes as well as motivation for competition. Thus, monitoring testosterone levels is gaining attention to evaluate athletic performance of one's physical performance in sport, fitness, and bodybuilding as well as prevent health risk factors for low levels of testosterone. There have been attempts using optical, electrical and biochemical sensors to monitor testosterone but are difficult to reproduce in large quantities and suffer from limitations of sensitivity, and detection limits. This can be addressed using Molecularly Imprinted Polymers (MIPs) in a point of care (POC) system. Molecularly Imprinted Polymers (MIPs) are a synthetic polymer with cavities in the polymer matrix serve as recognition sites for a specific template molecule, which are detected using electrochemical amperometry. In this paper, we have used MIPs in conjunction with cyclic voltammetry, to produce a viable, ultrasensitive electrochemical sensor for the detection of testosterone from a human sweat sample. This combination of MIPs and cyclic voltammetry allows for a simple, low-cost, mass-producible, and non-invasive method for detecting testosterone in human males. This method is extremely simple and cheap, allowing for consistent measurement of Testosterone levels in humans and allows for the detection of Testosterone in a POC. In our work, a Screen-printed carbon electrode (SPCE) using polypropylene fabric was used as the base working electrode in a three-electrode system. The screen-printing technique was implemented to layer a carbon paste over both sides of the fabric and was air-dried for one hour at 75⁰C. The SPCE was immersed into an acetate buffer solution that contains a 2.0mM monomer called o-phenylenediamine and with a 0.1mM testosterone template. Electropolymerization was carried out with cyclic voltammetry from a range of 0V to 1.0V, at a scan rate of 50 mV/s, a sensitivity (A/V) of 1e-5A, and for a total of 30 cycles. The set concentration tested was 100-1600 ng/ml of testosterone. The electrochemical characterization will have a potential sweep of -1.2 V to 1.2 V, a scan rate of 0.05 (V/s), a sensitivity (A/V) of 1e-5A, and a singular cycle. The wearable biosensor showed a detection range for testosterone from 100ng to 1600ng, electrochemical results also showed a clear and measurable result with an R-square value of 0.9417 which proves the accuracy of the developed sensor. Although this is not the complete saturation point and theoretically maximum limit of 28,842ng/ml can be achieved although this was not tested. The detectable lowest concentration of testosterone was found to be ~100ng/ml, and it was noted that lower than 100ng gives a weaker signal, In conclusion a novel electrochemical sensor based on a molecularly imprinted polymer used as the extended gate of a field effect transistor was developed for the ultrasensitive detection of sweat Testosterone. This sensing technology paves the way for the low cost, label-free, and point of care detection which can be used for evaluating ang monitoring athletic performance.more » « less
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