Inteum Company
Links
seedsprint
Visible Legacy
RSS
News & Resources
Inteum Company News
Inteum Library
Subscribe
Epidermal Microfluidic Devices for Capturing, Storing and Analyzing Sweat
Case ID:
UH23-001L^
Web Published:
9/9/2023
Eccrine sweat is an attractive biofluid for analyte detection and non-invasive health monitoring as it contains many biomarkers relevant to physiological health. Monitoring of electrolytes, metabolites, hormones, proteins and other exogenous agents in sweat may offer time-dynamic insights into metabolomic processes for health, nutrition and wellness. Traditional approaches for collecting sweat, such as absorbent pads or tubes, require trained personnel and expensive equipment for analysis and as such are not amenable to real-time analyses.
Wearable biosensors allow for intermittent or continuous non-invasive detection of analytes found in eccrine sweat. Because wearable sensors can provide continued real-time sensing with a relatively small footprint, they are ideal for monitoring and/or managing diseases without the need for frequent physician visits and cumbersome equipment.
There is an emerging class of wearable biosensors, which integrate microfluidic lab-on-chip designs with low-modulus (flexible) materials to support real-time, non-invasive sweat analysis. While initial systems have been simple, current designs utilize sophisticated network channels, valves and reservoirs. Although these platforms have powerful analytical capabilities, their soft-lithography-based fabrication requires time, labor and resource-intensive cleanroom processing, which restricts the device design space and increases development time.
Technology
Dr. Tyler Ray, an assistant professor at the University of Hawai‘i, and his colleagues, have created a novel class of flexible, stretchable, epidermal microfluidic (epifluidic) wearable devices, utilizing micro digital light processing (µDLP) printers. This fabrication technique produces devices with monolithic channels, valves and patterned open reservoirs with complex architectures that have previously been unachievable. The device platform supports the use of capillary burst valves (CBVs) to enable time-sequential sweat collection. Benchtop and on-body testing have been performed to validate performance of the 3D-epifluidic devices.
These 3D-printed epifluidic devices and their methods of fabrication offer a transformative approach to the rapid prototyping of wearable sweat biosensors with true microfluidic dimensions. They reduce both fabrication time and cost and at the same time expand the design space for additional device architectures and capabilities.
Applications:
Real-time eccrine sweat analysis
Disease management and diagnostics
Personalized health/medical monitoring
Fitness tracking – sports, military, fire fighters
Advantages:
Reduction in prototype development cost and cycle time
Expands device capabilities with maximization of 3D design space
Enhanced optical transparency of 3D printed channels
Seamless, thin, skin-safe epidermal interface
Soft and flexible, but still a robust, water-tight interface between the device and epidermal port
Simple and rapid device replacement
Platform supports time-sequential sweat collection
Can be analyzed directly or sent to a lab
Enables collection of pristine sweat samples during an extended active period of time
Additional Information:
Inventor(s): Tyler Ray, UH; Chung-Han Wu, UH; Howin Ma, UH
Publication(s):
Wu et al, Science Advances 2023
;
News Release 2023
IP: Published PCT Application
WO 2023/049352 A1
Contact: Angel Stigen, Business Development Consultant, astigen@skysonginnovations.com, 480.242.8844
Patent Information:
Title
App Type
Country
Serial No.
Patent No.
File Date
Issued Date
Expire Date
Direct Link:
https://canberra-ip.technologypublisher.com/tech?title=Epidermal_Microfluidic _Devices_for_Capturing%2c_Storing_and_Analyzing_Sweat
Keywords:
Bookmark this page
Download as PDF
For Information, Contact:
Jovan Heusser
Director of Licensing and Business Development
Skysong Innovations
jovan.heusser@skysonginnovations.com