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Paper-Based Optical Chemosensors

  • Book

  • October 2024
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5971467

Paper-based Optical Chemosensors comprehensively discusses the origin, development, and current state-of-the-art in paper-based sensors. With a focus on the principles, classifications, methodology, design, and application of paper-based sensors, this book represents a developing research field with recent innovative applications resulting in a comprehensive presentation of the different physico-chemical techniques using paper sensors. It discloses underlying rules and factors in paper-based sensors and discusses intricate sensing systems and working environments by ways of chemistry and physics for a variety of application scenarios such as environmental protection, food safety, public safety, and clinical diagnosis. This is a valuable resource for researchers who major in analytical chemistry, or for those who are interested in the development of methods or devices for rapid analysis/monitoring based on paper/membrane-based sensors who wish to broaden their knowledge in the allied field.

Table of Contents

1. A brief history of paper-based sensors 2. Basic principles of paper-based sensors 3. Basic structure composition of paper-based sensors 4. Design principles of paper-based sensors 5. Signal read-out of paper-based sensors 6. Optical chemical paper-based sensors 8. Applications of paper-based sensors 9. The future of paper-based sensors

Authors

Liang Feng Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Dalian, China. Prof. Liang Feng, Director of Department of Instrumentation and Analytical Chemistry in Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics of CAS. Prof. Feng received his PhD in analytical chemistry from Wuhan University in 2005. He subsequently joined Nobel Laureate Paul C. Lauterbur's group. In 2007, he moved to Prof. Kenneth S. Suslick's group as a postdoc researcher in University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. In 2009, he joined Dalian institute of chemical physics as a tenure track professor. His main research focuses on the development of optical chemsensors, electrochemical sensors, array-based sensors etc. for the determination of environmental pollutants, including pesticides residues, heavy-metal ions, poisonous anions, toxic gases, formaldehyde, etc.