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ALL­ISON SCHAAP: Lab-on-chip sen­sors for au­to­no­mous­ly mea­su­ring nut­ri­ents and car­bo­na­te pa­ra­me­ters

Ein­la­dung

04.07.2019
Bre­men

Donnerstag, 04. Juli 2019

im Hör­saal 2 (4012), 15 Uhr 

ALLISON SCHAAP
Senior Research Engineer, Microfluidic Sensors
National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, UK

gibt ein Se­mi­nar mit dem Ti­tel:
"Lab-on-chip sensors for autonomously measuring nutrients and carbonate parameters"

Zu­sam­men­fas­sung

Na­tu­ral wa­ters are vi­tal for life on earth and yet are of­ten ina­de­qua­te­ly un­ders­tood due part­ly to the dif­fi­cul­ty and cost of ac­ces­sing open wa­ter for sam­pling.  To ad­dress this, we de­ve­lop mi­crof­lui­dic sen­sors which au­to­no­mous­ly per­form in situ mea­su­re­ments of wa­ter che­mis­try.  We com­bi­ne op­tics, mi­crof­lui­dics, che­mis­try, and cust­om-en­gi­nee­red hard­ware to crea­te sen­sors which can be de­ploy­ed for months at a time thanks to their low re­agent and power con­sump­ti­on. 

In this pre­sen­ta­ti­on I’ll first give an over­view of our ge­ne­ral sen­sor plat­form, which has been im­ple­men­ted to mea­su­re a wide ran­ge of che­mi­cal pa­ra­me­ters in­clu­ding ni­tra­te, phos­pha­te, and pH.    Some re­cent de­ploy­ments – from the arc­tic to the tro­pics – will be used to il­lus­tra­te the cur­rent ca­pa­bi­li­ties and long-term po­ten­ti­al of this tech­no­lo­gy.

The se­cond part of the pre­sen­ta­ti­on will fo­cus in on one of our ne­west sen­sors as a case stu­dy: an al­kal­in­i­ty sen­sor.  Al­kal­in­i­ty is a mea­su­re­ment of the ca­pa­ci­ty of wa­ter to buf­fer against chan­ges in pH and is thus a key pa­ra­me­ter for mo­ni­to­ring and mo­del­ling oce­an aci­di­fi­ca­ti­on and the car­bon cy­cle.  The sci­en­ti­fic ap­p­li­ca­ti­ons of this sen­sor re­qui­re re­lia­ble ac­cu­ra­cy (~0.1%) du­ring de­ploy­ments las­ting months in har­sh and va­ry­ing con­di­ti­ons.  De­ve­l­o­ped for a pro­ject on car­bon cap­tu­re and sto­r­a­ge, the sen­sor has been de­ploy­ed for the first time in the past year.  The re­sults from lab tests and preli­mi­na­ry re­sults from the sea tri­als show that the tech­no­lo­gy is in a strong po­si­ti­on to be able to meet the­se de­man­ds.

Last­ly, I’ll dis­cuss some of the en­gi­nee­ring chal­len­ges that we’ve faced in crea­ting tech­no­lo­gy that has to sur­vi­ve at sea, les­sons we’ve lear­ned, and the group’s fu­ture plans for the tech­no­lo­gy.

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