1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a sensor device, and more particularly to a potentiometric urea sensor for sensing and measuring a concentration of ammonium ions in a liquid sample.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In recent years, with the rapid progress in electronic technologies, the technology of bio-device has been further improved and applied to design better sensors for determining urea in biological samples such as blood, blood components and urine. In clinical examinations such as in hospital/clinic, blood urea nitrogen (BUN) assay useful in assessing the kidney function. A typical BUN value of a healthy human being is in a range of about 8-20 mg/dl. A BUN value higher than 20 mg/dl indicates impaired renal function, congestive heart failure, acute myocardial infarction, dehydration or excessive protein intake. On the other hand, a BUN value lower than 8 mg/dl indicates liver failure, malnutrition, anabolic steroid use or siliac disease. Thus, it is highly desirable to measure the concentrations of biological substances for evaluating/monitoring the function of various organs of the human body. Various prior arts propose indirect measurement of the concentration of urea such as measuring pH value or volume of ammonia gas transformed by ammonium ions, spectral analysis or enzyme method. However, so far, none of the prior arts present any method of directly sensing and measuring the concentration of the ammonium ions. Accordingly, a device and a method for directly sensing and measuring ammonium ions are highly desirable.
The present invention is directed to a potentiometric urea sensor for sensing and measuring a concentration of ammonium ions.
The present invention is directed to a potentiometric urea sensor comprising an ammonium ion-selective membrane for sensing and measuring a concentration of ammonium ions in a biological sample.
The present invention is also directed to a method for fabricating a potentiometric urea sensor for sensing and measuring a concentration of ammonium ions in a biological sample.
In an embodiment, the potentiometric urea sensor can be easily fabricated at a lower cost and protected from heat and light.
In one embodiment, the potentiometric urea sensor for sensing and measuring the concentration of urea in a biological sample comprises an ammonium ion selective membrane and urease enzymes immobilized on at least a portion or over the ammonium ion selective membrane, and a detector system for processing signals from the sensor.
In one embodiment, the ammonium ion selective membrane comprises a water-permeable matrix on the ammonium ion selective membrane immobilizing the urease enzymes.
In one embodiment, the ammonium ion selective membrane comprises a plasticized polyvinyl chloride and nonactin.
In another embodiment, the urease enzymes may be immobilized on another layer and then disposed over and in contact with at least a portion of the ammonium ion selective membrane. The ammonium ion selective membrane comprises plasticized polyvinylchloride and nonactin, and the urease enzyme is immobilized on a water-permeable matrix.
In an embodiment, the potentiometric urea sensor comprises a substrate, a non-insulating solid-state ion sensing electrode, a sensing window, a conductive line, an ammonium ion selective membrane, an enzyme layer and a read-out circuit. The non-insulating solid-state ion sensing membrane is formed on the carbon based substrate and is adopted for sensing a pH value of a solution. The conductive line is disposed on the carbon based substrate and serves as a transmission line for the sensing signal. The carbon based substrate is connected to the single sensing window or array sensing windows structure on the carbon based substrate. Compare to the single sensing structure, the array sensors have the following advantages: (1) Multiple measurement to save the usage of sample, (2) Increasing the signal to noise ratio (S/N) to improved the design of output interface, (3) Increasing the usage lifetime of sensor to have good commercial value. The ammonium ion-selective membrane is disposed in the sensing window and the enzyme layer is immobilized in the sensing window. The readout circuit is connected to the conductive line for reading the sensing signal from the ammonium ion-selective electrode.
Referring to
Next, as illustrated in
Other plasticizers suitable for use may include, but are not limited to tris(2-ethylhexyl)phosphate, nitrocymene, 2-nitrophenyloctyl ether, dibutyl sebacate, diethyl adipate, phthalates, propylene carbonate, 5-phenylpentanol, or mixtures thereof. Still other binders and ionophore combinations may occur to those skilled in the art, which are within the scope of the present invention.
Next, as illustrated in
Hereinafter, the process of immobilization of urease enzymes 7 may be described as follows. First, the solution of urea/PVA-SbQ about 10 μl may be dropped on the ammonium ion selective membrane 6, and then the ammonium ion selective membrane 6 may be irradiated with a 4 W ultraviolet light at wavelength 365 nm for 20 minutes to polymerize the photopolymer and thereby immobilize the urease enzymes on the ammonium ion-selective membrane 6 in the sensing window to complete the fabrication of the potentiometric urea sensor device.
As illustrated in
The operation of the urea sensor may be described as follows. At step 1, an amplifier is used as the readout circuit of the potentiometric urea sensor device. At step 2, the potentiometric urea sensor device is placed into a buffer solution for some time until a stable response potential is read, which is taken as the reference potential. At step 3, the potentiometric urea sensor is placed into a sample solution, for example a blood sample. In the blood sample, the urea is first enzymatically converted to NH4+ and HCO3− by the immobilized urease enzymes on the ammonium ion selective membrane. Next, the NH4+ may be directly sensed by the ammonium ion-selective membrane 6 and which in turn is read as a signal by the read-out circuit to generate a response potential, whose value corresponds to the concentration of the ammonium ions. The measured concentration of ammonium ions provides an estimated concentration of the urea in blood.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
Accordingly compared to prior arts, the present invention has at least the following advantages. The urease enzymes are immobilized via a chemical cross-linking reagent or physical adsorption. The urease enzymes convert the urea into ammonium ions whose concentration is then directly measured as response potential which corresponds to the concentration of urea in the sample. Thus, the measurement of the urea concentration is not only rapid but also more accurate compared to the prior arts. Besides, the potentiometric urea sensor of the present invention can be fabricated by using a simpler and standard semiconductor process and therefore the fabrication cost is reduced and the through-put is increased.
The above description is given by way of example, and not limitation. Given the above disclosure, one skilled in the art could devise variations that are within the scope and spirit of the invention disclosed herein, including configurations ways of the recessed portions and materials and/or designs of the attaching structures. Further, the various features of the embodiments disclosed herein can be used alone, or in varying combinations with each other and are not intended to be limited to the specific combination described herein. Thus, the scope of the claims is not to be limited by the illustrated embodiments.
This application is a continuation in part of the U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/984,495 filed on Nov. 8, 2004.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10984495 | Nov 2004 | US |
Child | 12498473 | US |