Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5031367 Biosensors and Bioelectronics 2018 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A mobile phone based dark-field far-field microscope was developed for nanoparticle quantification.•The microscope weighted 380 g and cost less than 2000 with easy assemble and operation.•Quantification of bioassay with the microscope shown comparable result to standard dark-field microscope.•Potentiate a TB diagnosis assay for resource-limited area.

Dark-field microscope (DFM) analysis of nanoparticle binding signal is highly useful for a variety of research and biomedical applications, but current applications for nanoparticle quantification rely on expensive DFM systems. The cost, size, limited robustness of these DFMs limits their utility for non-laboratory settings. Most nanoparticle analyses use high-magnification DFM images, which are labor intensive to acquire and subject to operator bias. Low-magnification DFM image capture is faster, but is subject to background from surface artifacts and debris, although image processing can partially compensate for background signal. We thus mated an LED light source, a dark-field condenser and a 20× objective lens with a mobile phone camera to create an inexpensive, portable and robust DFM system suitable for use in non-laboratory conditions. This proof-of-concept mobile DFM device weighs less than 400 g and costs less than $2000, but analysis of images captured with this device reveal similar nanoparticle quantitation results to those acquired with a much larger and more expensive desktop DFMM system. Our results suggest that similar devices may be useful for quantification of stable, nanoparticle-based activity and quantitation assays in resource-limited areas where conventional assay approaches are not practical.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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