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Mid-Infrared Tuneable Laser Spectroscopy for Glucose Sensing
Mid-infrared spectroscopy is a versatile analytical technique, with recent technological developments that enable further advancements towards miniaturised and portable sensor applications. Quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) are infrared lasers that are small, can be made tuneable, and can be engineered...
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Format: | Dissertation |
Language: | English |
Online Access: | Request full text |
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Summary: | Mid-infrared spectroscopy is a versatile analytical technique, with recent technological developments that enable further advancements towards miniaturised and portable sensor applications. Quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) are infrared lasers that are small, can be made tuneable, and can be engineered to cover a specific wavelength range. They therefore have high potential in a wavelength region where traditionally mainly spectrometers have been available. Mid-infrared spectroscopy targets the fundamental molecular vibrational levels, and measurements in this wavelength range can provide unique features useful for classification, identification, and quantification of many materials. This technique is therefore highly suitable for label-free and accurate measurements of an investigated sample.
The focus of this thesis is on biomedical applications of mid-infrared spectroscopy, specifically for glucose sensing. The aim is to develop an experimental setup and analytical methods for fast and accurate measurements of glucose in biological fluids. Glucose sensing is a critical tool for management of diabetes, and current commercially available devices that measure subcutaneously have shortcomings such as a lag time compared to the actual blood glucose level. Fluid measurements in the peritoneal cavity have been suggested as a possible replacement for subcutaneous monitoring. While previous research has investigated mid-infrared spectroscopy measurements for hospital settings or non-invasive monitoring, there has been less interest in solutions targeted towards portable sensing. This work has therefore concentrated on a fibre-coupled sensor system with a QCL source, with development towards a continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) device.
This thesis presents contributions on QCL-based spectroscopy and chemometric methods. The included papers document the development and characterisation of a fibre-coupled QCL setup. Additional investigation is done into signal-enhanced attenuated total reflection (ATR) spectroscopy, and a comprehensive study of multivariate analysis with convolutional neural networks and other chemometric methods is also included. Finally, the system is employed for measurements of physiological glucose levels in peritoneal fluid samples from animal trials. The presented results show that fibre-coupled setups in transmission and ATR configurations are both suitable for measurements of glucose in peritoneal fluid. This system has a high potential for f |
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