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Department of Pharmacology

 
Author(s): 
Sindi, HS, Stevenson, AC, Lowe, CR
Abstract: 

A new acoustic sensor geometry, the magnetic acoustic resonant sensor (MARS), is described. The device comprises a circular 0.5-mm-thick resonant plate fabricated from a wide variety of nonpiezoelectric materials and coated on the underside with a 2.5-microm-thick aluminum film. Harmonic radial shear waves over at least a 2 orders of magnitude frequency range can be induced in the resonant plate by enhanced magnetic direct generation using a noncontacting rf coil and NdFeB magnet. Mass loading with adherent aluminum films produced frequency changes of 106 Hz/nm (40.8 Hz/ng-mm(-2)), while contact with viscous fluids resulted in maximum changes of 15 446 Hz/cP. At an operating frequency of 50 MHz, the device detected viscosity changes as low as 0.0006 cP. The adsorption of proteins such as human IgG and the binding of a complementary antigen, goat anti-human IgG, on the upper nonmetallized surface of the device has been monitored with a detection limit of approximately 75 ng/mL. The binding of substrates and allosteric effectors to glycogen phosphorylase b has provided evidence that the device is very sensitive to viscoelastic changes in adsorbed proteins. The MARS device generates radial shear acoustic waves over a broad bandwidth that are unaffected by the conductivity of the solution. These results suggest that simple metal, glass, crystalline, or polycrystalline plates can be used as a new type of tunable acoustic immunosensor.

Publication ID: 
54412
Published date: 
1 April 2001
Publication source: 
pubmed
Publication type: 
Journal articles
Journal name: 
Anal Chem
Publication volume: 
73
Publisher: 
Parent title: 
Edition: 
Publication number: