The app and cradle system for smartphones has sensitive biosensing capabilities that could enable on-the-spot tracking of groundwater contamination and combine the phone's GPS data with biosensing data to map the spread of pathogens.
The system could provide immediate and inexpensive medical diagnostic tests in field clinics or contaminant checks in the food processing and distribution chain, researchers at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign said.
The wedge-shaped cradle contains a series of optical components - lenses and filters - found in much larger and more expensive laboratory devices. The cradle holds the phone's camera in alignment with the optical components.
When anything biological attaches to the photonic crystal - such as protein, cells, pathogens or DNA - the reflected colour will shift from a shorter wavelength to a longer wavelength.
For the handheld biosensor, a normal microscope slide is coated with the photonic material. The slide is primed to react to a specific target molecule. The photonic crystal slide is inserted into a slot on the cradle and the spectrum measured.
The entire test takes only a few minutes; the app walks the user through the process step by step. Although the cradle holds only about USD 200 of optical components, it performs as accurately as a large USD 50,000 spectrophotometer in the laboratory. So now, the device is not only portable, but also affordable for fieldwork in developing nations.
