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We study the interaction of a laser cavity-soliton microcomb with an externally coupled, co-propagating tunable CW pump, observing parametric Kerr interactions which lead to the formation of both a cross-phase modulation and a four-wave mixing replica of the laser cavity-soliton. We compare and explain the dependence of the microcomb spectra from both the cavity-soliton and pump parameters, demonstrating the ability to adjust the microcomb externally without breaking or interfering with the soliton state. The parametric nature of the process agrees with numerical simulations. The parametric extended state maintains the typical robustness of laser-cavity solitons.
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The ability to simultaneously heat and image samples using transmitted light is crucial for several biological applications. However, existing techniques such as heated stage microscopes, thermal cyclers equipped with imaging capabilities, or non-contact heating systems are often bulky, expensive, and complex. This work presents the development and characterization of a Miniaturized Optically-clear Thermal Enclosure (MOTE) system-an open-source, inexpensive, and low-powered modular system-capable of convectively heating samples while simultaneously imaging them with transmitted light. We develop and validate a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model to design and optimize the heating chamber. The model simulates velocity and temperature profiles within the heating chamber for various chamber materials and sizes. The computational model yielded an optimal chamber dimension capable of achieving a stable temperature ranging from ambient to 95 °C with a spatial discrepancy of less than 1.5 °C, utilizing less than 8.5 W of power. The dual-functionality of the MOTE system, enabling synchronous heating and transmitted light imaging, was demonstrated through the successful execution of paper-based LAMP reactions to detect λ DNA samples in real-time down to 10 copies/µL of the target concentration. The MOTE system offers a promising and flexible platform for various applications, from molecular diagnostics to biochemical analyses, cell biology, genomics, and education.
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Laser cavity-soliton microcombs are robust optical pulsed sources, usually implemented with a microresonator-filtered fibre laser. In such a configuration, a nonlinear microcavity converts the narrowband pulse resulting from bandwidth-limited amplification to a background-free broadband microcomb. Here, we theoretically and experimentally study the soliton conversion efficiency between the narrowband input pulse and the two outputs of a four-port integrated microcavity, namely the 'Drop' and 'Through' ports. We simultaneously measure on-chip, single-soliton conversion efficiencies of 45% and 25% for the two broadband comb outputs at the 'Drop' and 'Through' ports of a 48.9 GHz free-spectral range micro-ring resonator, obtaining a total conversion efficiency of 72%.
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Lateral flow assays and paper microfluidics have the potential to replace benchtop instrumented medical diagnostic systems with instrument-free systems that rely on passive transport of liquid through micro-porous paper substrates. Predicting the imbibition dynamics of liquid through dry paper substrates is mostly modeled through the Lucas-Washburn (LW) equations. However, the LW framework assumes that the fluid front exhibits a sharp boundary between the dry and wet phases across the liquid imbibition interface. Additionally, the relative humidity in the environment results in moisture trapped within the pores of the paper substrates as the paper attains an equilibrium with the ambient air. Here, we apply a two-phase transport framework based on Brooks and Corey's model to capture imbibition dynamics on partially saturated paper substrates. The model is experimentally validated and is then used to predict the liquid-paper imbibition dynamics in simulated environments with 1-70% relative humidity. The model was also used to determine the saturation gradient of liquid along the imbibition interface of the paper substrate. Insights from these studies enabled us to determine the mechanism of the liquid transport in partially saturated porous paper substrates. The model also enabled us to evaluate the optimal paper shapes and relative humidity of the environment that maximize imbibition rates and minimize imbibition front broadening. Finally, we evaluate the effect of moisture content of paper on the rate of paper-based biochemical reaction by amplifying a sequence of the SARS-CoV-2 RNA target via reverse transcriptase loop-mediated isothermal amplification. Taken together, this study provides some important guidelines to academic and applied researchers working in point-of-care diagnostics to develop paper-based testing platforms that are capable of functioning in a robust manner across multiple environmental conditions.
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COVID-19 , RNA Viral , COVID-19/diagnóstico , Humanos , Umidade , Porosidade , SARS-CoV-2RESUMO
A highly sensitive refractive index sensor is proposed by using the resonant coupling of a Tamm state to a Fabry-Perot resonance in slits periodically pierced in a metal film. This new hybrid resonance exists at the interface between a dielectric Bragg mirror and a subwavelength metal grating. Contrary to a classic Tamm plasmon, it is sensitive to the ambient media refractive index due to its confinement inside the grating slits. The proposed sensor output can be either the reflected intensity or preferably the wavelength, and its sensitivity and figure of merit are numerically investigated with the help of rigorous coupled wave analysis. The sensitivity of the studied sensor is 87 nm/RIU for a refractive index range from 1.25 to 1.38, and, at the expense of the resolution, it can reach up to 160 nm/RIU for a grating duty cycle of 50%. The figure of merit is around ${{7.5}}\;{{\rm{RIU}}^{- 1}}$ with a large measuring range. The index sensor performances and operating resonance wavelength can be modified by adjusting the grating geometric parameters (height and duty cycle). The possibility to achieve wavelength modulation in any spectral range makes the proposed grating Tamm structure an attractive candidate to design refractive index sensors and photonic components in the infrared and terahertz domains.
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Loop-mediated isothermal amplification or LAMP has been identified to be an efficient technology for point-of-care diagnostics. Paper-based LAMP technique has tremendous potential in replacing the existing tube-based technology as the manufacturing cost of a paper-based device is comparatively lower and easy-to-use. LAMP-based paper diagnostic device for Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB) detection is of extreme importance as it will help in early and rapid diagnosis of the affected patients. The fabrication of these devices requires assessment of design parameters on the extent of LAMP amplification reaction. Hence, CFD studies would be extremely beneficial from the design perspective. The current work presents an insight into the CFD simulations for LAMP amplification reaction on a porous paper membrane (nitrocellulose membrane). The convection-diffusion-reaction model is solved on a COMSOL Multiphysics 5.0 platform. Studies on effect of pore size, aspect ratio and initial DNA concentration on the extent of DNA amplification reaction have been carried out. The current paper-based technique is effective in detecting a minimum of 5 copies of DNA contrasting the previous semi-quantitative technique which demonstrated the detection of minimum 98 copies. Overall, the simulation results displayed almost 96% enhancement in the DNA amplification rate on paper membrane. Graphical abstract Graphical abstract for the computational study of DNA amplification reaction via LAMP technique on a porous paper membrane.
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Simulação por Computador , DNA Bacteriano/genética , Testes Diagnósticos de Rotina , Hidrodinâmica , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genética , Técnicas de Amplificação de Ácido Nucleico , Papel , Sistemas Automatizados de Assistência Junto ao Leito , Humanos , Análise Numérica Assistida por Computador , Porosidade , Reprodutibilidade dos TestesRESUMO
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
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Radiative communication using electro-magnetic (EM) fields amongst the wearable and implantable devices act as the backbone for information exchange around a human body, thereby enabling prime applications in the fields of connected healthcare, electroceuticals, neuroscience, augmented and virtual reality. However, owing to such radiative nature of the traditional wireless communication, EM signals propagate in all directions, inadvertently allowing an eavesdropper to intercept the information. In this context, the human body, primarily due to its high water content, has emerged as a medium for low-loss transmission, termed human body communication (HBC), enabling energy-efficient means for wearable communication. However, conventional HBC implementations suffer from significant radiation which also compromises security. In this article, we present Electro-Quasistatic Human Body Communication (EQS-HBC), a method for localizing signals within the body using low-frequency carrier-less (broadband) transmission, thereby making it extremely difficult for a nearby eavesdropper to intercept critical private data, thus producing a covert communication channel, i.e. the human body. This work, for the first time, demonstrates and analyzes the improvement in private space enabled by EQS-HBC. Detailed experiments, supported by theoretical modeling and analysis, reveal that the quasi-static (QS) leakage due to the on-body EQS-HBC transmitter-human body interface is detectable up to <0.15 m, whereas the human body alone leaks only up to ~0.01 m, compared to >5 m detection range for on-body EM wireless communication, highlighting the underlying advantage of EQS-HBC to enable covert communication.
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Eletrodos Implantados/normas , Medidas de Segurança , Fenômenos Fisiológicos da Pele , Dispositivos Eletrônicos Vestíveis/normas , Tecnologia sem Fio/instrumentação , Campos Eletromagnéticos , Humanos , Eletricidade Estática , Tecnologia sem Fio/normasRESUMO
Human body communication (HBC) has emerged as an alternative to radio wave communication for connecting low power, miniaturized wearable, and implantable devices in, on, and around the human body. HBC uses the human body as the communication channel between on-body devices. Previous studies characterizing the human body channel has reported widely varying channel response much of which has been attributed to the variation in measurement setup. This calls for the development of a unifying bio-physical model of HBC, supported by in-depth analysis and an understanding of the effect of excitation, termination modality on HBC measurements. This paper characterizes the human body channel up to 1 MHz frequency to evaluate it as a medium for the broadband communication. The communication occurs primarily in the electro-quasistatic (EQS) regime at these frequencies through the subcutaneous tissues. A lumped bio-physical model of HBC is developed, supported by experimental validations that provide insight into some of the key discrepancies found in previous studies. Voltage loss measurements are carried out both with an oscilloscope and a miniaturized wearable prototype to capture the effects of non-common ground. Results show that the channel loss is strongly dependent on the termination impedance at the receiver end, with up to 4 dB variation in average loss for different termination in an oscilloscope and an additional 9 dB channel loss with wearable prototype compared to an oscilloscope measurement. The measured channel response with capacitive termination reduces low-frequency loss and allows flat-band transfer function down to 13 KHz, establishing the human body as a broadband communication channel. Analysis of the measured results and the simulation model shows that instruments with 50 Ω input impedance (Vector Network Analyzer, Spectrum Analyzer) provides pessimistic estimation of channel loss at low frequencies. Instead, high impedance and capacitive termination should be used at the receiver end for accurate voltage mode loss measurements of the HBC channel at low frequencies. The experimentally validated bio-physical model shows that capacitive voltage mode termination can improve the low frequency loss by up to 50 dB, which helps broadband communication significantly.
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Engenharia Biomédica/instrumentação , Comunicação , Eletrônica/instrumentação , Dispositivos Eletrônicos Vestíveis , Tecnologia sem Fio/instrumentação , Eletricidade , Desenho de Equipamento , Antebraço/fisiologia , Humanos , Masculino , Próteses e ImplantesRESUMO
Spatially uniform reconstitution of dried reagents is critical to the function of paper microfluidic devices. Advancing fluid fronts in paper microfluidic devices drive (convect) and concentrate rehydrated reagents to the edges, causing steep chemical gradients and imperfect mixing. This largely unsolved problem in paper microfluidics is exacerbated by increasing device dimensions. In this article, we demonstrate that mixing of dried reagents with a rehydrating fluid in paper microfluidics may be significantly enhanced by stacking paper layers having different wicking rates. Compared to single-layer paper membranes, stacking reduced the "non-reactive area", i.e. area in which the reconstituted reagents did not interact with the rehydrating fluid, by as much as 97% in large (8 cm × 2 cm) paper membranes. A paper stack was designed to collect ~0.9 ml liquid sample and uniformly mix it with dried reagents. Applications of this technology are demonstrated in two areas: (i) collection and dry storage of sputum samples for tuberculosis testing, and (ii) salivary glucose detection using an enzymatic assay and colorimetric readout. Maximizing the interaction of liquids with dried reagents is central to enhancing the performance of all paper microfluidic devices; this technique is therefore likely to find important applications in paper microfluidics.
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Human Body Communication (HBC) has recently emerged as an alternative to radio frequency transmission for connecting devices on and in the human body with order(s) of magnitude lower energy. The communication between these devices can give rise to different scenarios, which can be classified as wearable-wearable, wearable-machine, machine-machine interactions. In this paper, for the first time, the human body channel characteristics is measured for a wide range of such possible scenarios (14 vs. a few in previous literature) and classified according to the form-factor of the transmitter and receiver. The effect of excitation/termination configurations on the channel loss is also explored, which helps explain the previously unexplained wide variation in HBC Channel measurements. Measurement results show that wearable-wearable interaction has the maximum loss (upto -50 dB) followed by wearable-machine and machinemachine interaction (min loss of 0.5 dB), primarily due to the small ground size of the wearable devices. Among the excitation configurations, differential excitation is suitable for small channel length whereas single ended is better for longer channel.
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Corpo Humano , Dispositivos Eletrônicos Vestíveis , HumanosRESUMO
In this emerging data-driven world, secure and ubiquitous authentication mechanisms are necessary prior to any confidential information delivery. Biometric authentication has been widely adopted as it provides a unique and non-transferable solution for user authentication. In this article, the authors envision the need for an infield, remote and on-demand authentication system for a highly mobile and tactical environment, such as critical information delivery to soldiers in a battlefield. Fingerprint-based in-field biometric authentication combined with the conventional password-based techniques would ensure strong security of critical information delivery. The proposed in-field fingerprint authentication system involves: (i) wearable fingerprint sensor, (ii) template extraction (TE) algorithm, (iii) data encryption, (iv) on-body and long-range communications, all of which are subject to energy constraints due to the requirement of small form-factor wearable devices. This paper explores the design space and provides an optimized solution for resource allocation to enable energy-efficient in-field fingerprint- based authentication. Using Human Body Communication (HBC) for the on-body data transfer along with the analytics (TE algorithm) on the hub allows for the maximum lifetime of the energy-sparse sensor. A custom-built hardware prototype using COTS components demonstrates the feasibility of the in-field fingerprint authentication framework.
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Identificação Biométrica , Comunicação , Segurança Computacional , Corpo Humano , Algoritmos , Confidencialidade , Dermatoglifia , Humanos , Dispositivos Eletrônicos VestíveisRESUMO
Rapid miniaturization and cost reduction of computing, along with the availability of wearable and implantable physiological sensors have led to the growth of human Body Area Network (BAN) formed by a network of such sensors and computing devices. One promising application of such a network is wearable health monitoring where the collected data from the sensors would be transmitted and analyzed to assess the health of a person. Typically, the devices in a BAN are connected through wireless (WBAN), which suffers from energy inefficiency due to the high-energy consumption of wireless transmission. Human Body Communication (HBC) uses the relatively low loss human body as the communication medium to connect these devices, promising order(s) of magnitude better energy-efficiency and built-in security compared to WBAN. In this paper, we demonstrate a health monitoring device and system built using Commercial-Off-The-Shelf (COTS) sensors and components, that can collect data from physiological sensors and transmit it through a) intra-body HBC to another device (hub) worn on the body or b) upload health data through HBC-based human-machine interaction to an HBC capable machine. The system design constraints and signal transfer characteristics for the implemented HBC-based wearable health monitoring system are measured and analyzed, showing reliable connectivity with >8× power savings compared to Bluetooth low-energy (BTLE).