Plastic chip measures blood sugar and assures the quality of food
The sensor, which measures 10 mm x 10 mm, can replace advanced, expensive optical devices containing lenses and grids in what are commonly called spectroscopic tools. The sensor is also more reliable than traditional optical devices that require calibrating and maintenance. This chip does not corrode, is robust and provides quick results from analyses. The chips can be produced in the same type of machines that make compact discs.
The plastic chip was originally developed to detect different types of plastic; it is now used in bottle recycling machines and in a recently developed CO2 sensor that controls ventilation in buildings. As the chip is so robust, it can be used in harsh environments, such as in the depths of an oil well to detect gases. It can measure both the blood’s oxygen intake and blood sugar levels in the human body. It can also be used in the quality control of food in supermarkets where it measures both fat and water content.
The technology in the chip is called DOE,which is an abbreviation for Diffractive Optical element. It is here that the secret lies. The chip contains a synthetic hologram that functions as a light filter. The hologram diffracts the light reflected by an object or gas and is able to identify energy in the infrared spectrum. The hologram is designed to measure the energy at particular wavelengths because each substance emits a number of spectral peaks that are specific to that particular substance. While the eye sees twodimensional figures, a hologram reproduces the light waves instead of the actual object.
The chip can therefore be used to identify or check the quality of substances in many contexts, says SINTEF research scientist Odd Lovhaugen.The SINTEF Group is the largest independent research organisation in Scandinavia, based in Trondheim.
The research scientists have now taken out a patent, based on the same technology, for a device to measure alcohol. The device can test the level of alcohol on the spot in a driver’s blood and, if it is certified to do so, will be able to replace the blood samples that currently need to be tested by forensic laboratories. The scientists say the chip will give less ambiguous results than the traditional methods in use today, which employ traditional spectroscopy.
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The development of medical equipment, products and technical procedures is characterized by high research and development costs in a variety of fields related to the study of human medicine.
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