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Review of Recent Metamaterial Microfluidic Sensorsopen access

Authors
Salim, AhmedLim, Sungjoon
Issue Date
Jan-2018
Publisher
MDPI AG
Keywords
metamaterial; microfluidic; chemical sensor; biosensor; dielectric perturbation
Citation
SENSORS, v.18, no.1
Journal Title
SENSORS
Volume
18
Number
1
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/1387
DOI
10.3390/s18010232
ISSN
1424-8220
1424-3210
Abstract
Metamaterial elements/arrays exhibit a sensitive response to fluids yet with a small footprint, therefore, they have been an attractive choice to realize various sensing devices when integrated with microfluidic technology. Micro-channels made from inexpensive biocompatible materials avoid any contamination from environment and require only microliter-nanoliter sample for sensing. Simple design, easy fabrication process, light weight prototype, and instant measurements are advantages as compared to conventional (optical, electrochemical and biological) sensing systems. Inkjet-printed flexible sensors find their utilization in rapidly growing wearable electronics and health-monitoring flexible devices. Adequate sensitivity and repeatability of these low profile microfluidic sensors make them a potential candidate for point-of-care testing which novice patients can use reliably. Aside from degraded sensitivity and lack of selectivity in all practical microwave chemical sensors, they require an instrument, such as vector network analyzer for measurements and not readily available as a self-sustained portable sensor. This review article presents state-of-the-art metamaterial inspired microfluidic bio/chemical sensors (passive devices ranging from gigahertz to terahertz range) with an emphasis on metamaterial sensing circuit and microfluidic detection. We also highlight challenges and strategies to cope these issues which set future directions.
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Lim, Sung Joon
창의ICT공과대학 (전자전기공학부)
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