Theoretical and Experimental Characterization of Time-Dependent Signatures of Acoustic Wave Based Biosensors

The object of this thesis research is to facilitate the appraisal and analysis of the signatures of the modern acoustic wave biosensors, as well as to improve the experimental methodology to enhance sensor performance. For this purpose, both theoretical characterization of acoustic wave sensor signa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lee, Sang Hun
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2006
Subjects:
SAW
QCM
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/11631
id ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-11631
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-116312013-01-07T20:14:44ZTheoretical and Experimental Characterization of Time-Dependent Signatures of Acoustic Wave Based BiosensorsLee, Sang HunAcoustic wave sensorsBiosensorsImmunosensorsSAWQCMThe object of this thesis research is to facilitate the appraisal and analysis of the signatures of the modern acoustic wave biosensors, as well as to improve the experimental methodology to enhance sensor performance. For this purpose, both theoretical characterization of acoustic wave sensor signatures and experimental studies for the most frequently used acoustic wave biosensors, the liquid phase QCM (quartz crystal microbalance) and the vapor phase SAW (surface acoustic wave) sensors, are presented. For the study of SAW vapor phase detection, the author fabricated different types of two-port SAW resonator sensors on quartz substrates and designed and performed a significant number of detection experiments. These were conducted both with calibrated or known target samples under laboratory conditions at Georgia Tech Hunt Lab and with samples of unknown concentrations such as seized crack cocaine (courtesy of Georgia Bureau of Investigation, GBI) to see the sensors capability to work in the field conditions. In addition, the dependence of the SAW sensor signatures on specific locations of the surface perturbation was investigated to account for some observed abnormal responses. Finally, a novel approach to classify and visualize chemically analogous substances is introduced. The author expects that the thesis work herein may contribute to the study of the modern acoustic wave biosensors which includes but is not limited to: the establishment of underpinning theory that will aid in the evaluation of the signatures; the practical aspects of design and fabrication of SAW devices specific to the vapor phase immunoassay; the development of efficient experimental methodologies; the strategic immobilization of a biolayer on SAW resonator based biosensors; and, the acquisition of reference data for the development of commercial acoustic wave sensors.Georgia Institute of Technology2006-09-01T19:43:46Z2006-09-01T19:43:46Z2006-07-13Dissertation5810008 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/11631en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Acoustic wave sensors
Biosensors
Immunosensors
SAW
QCM
spellingShingle Acoustic wave sensors
Biosensors
Immunosensors
SAW
QCM
Lee, Sang Hun
Theoretical and Experimental Characterization of Time-Dependent Signatures of Acoustic Wave Based Biosensors
description The object of this thesis research is to facilitate the appraisal and analysis of the signatures of the modern acoustic wave biosensors, as well as to improve the experimental methodology to enhance sensor performance. For this purpose, both theoretical characterization of acoustic wave sensor signatures and experimental studies for the most frequently used acoustic wave biosensors, the liquid phase QCM (quartz crystal microbalance) and the vapor phase SAW (surface acoustic wave) sensors, are presented. For the study of SAW vapor phase detection, the author fabricated different types of two-port SAW resonator sensors on quartz substrates and designed and performed a significant number of detection experiments. These were conducted both with calibrated or known target samples under laboratory conditions at Georgia Tech Hunt Lab and with samples of unknown concentrations such as seized crack cocaine (courtesy of Georgia Bureau of Investigation, GBI) to see the sensors capability to work in the field conditions. In addition, the dependence of the SAW sensor signatures on specific locations of the surface perturbation was investigated to account for some observed abnormal responses. Finally, a novel approach to classify and visualize chemically analogous substances is introduced. The author expects that the thesis work herein may contribute to the study of the modern acoustic wave biosensors which includes but is not limited to: the establishment of underpinning theory that will aid in the evaluation of the signatures; the practical aspects of design and fabrication of SAW devices specific to the vapor phase immunoassay; the development of efficient experimental methodologies; the strategic immobilization of a biolayer on SAW resonator based biosensors; and, the acquisition of reference data for the development of commercial acoustic wave sensors.
author Lee, Sang Hun
author_facet Lee, Sang Hun
author_sort Lee, Sang Hun
title Theoretical and Experimental Characterization of Time-Dependent Signatures of Acoustic Wave Based Biosensors
title_short Theoretical and Experimental Characterization of Time-Dependent Signatures of Acoustic Wave Based Biosensors
title_full Theoretical and Experimental Characterization of Time-Dependent Signatures of Acoustic Wave Based Biosensors
title_fullStr Theoretical and Experimental Characterization of Time-Dependent Signatures of Acoustic Wave Based Biosensors
title_full_unstemmed Theoretical and Experimental Characterization of Time-Dependent Signatures of Acoustic Wave Based Biosensors
title_sort theoretical and experimental characterization of time-dependent signatures of acoustic wave based biosensors
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/11631
work_keys_str_mv AT leesanghun theoreticalandexperimentalcharacterizationoftimedependentsignaturesofacousticwavebasedbiosensors
_version_ 1716474518467248128