Publications by authors named "Hrishikesh Iyer"

Article Synopsis
  • Microdialysis (MD) is a key method used to analyze chemicals in biological tissues, useful in various fields like neurology and dermatology, but it faces limitations in sensitivity and resolution.
  • The development of a nanodialysis (ND) probe using advanced silicon microfabrication offers improved chemical sampling, achieving 100 μm spatial resolution and subsecond timing, significantly outperforming traditional MD techniques.
  • These ND probes can provide detailed, minimally invasive sampling in live tissues, opening up opportunities for advancements in clinical and pharmaceutical research.
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Microdialysis (MD) is a versatile and powerful technique for chemical profiling of biological tissues and is widely used for quantification of neurotransmitters, neuropeptides, metabolites, biomarkers, and drugs in the central nervous system as well as in dermatology, ophthalmology, and in pain research. However, MD performance is severely limited by fundamental tradeoffs between chemical sensitivity, spatial resolution, and temporal response. Here, by using wafer-scale silicon microfabrication, we develop and demonstrate a nanodialysis (ND) sampling probe that enables highly localized chemical sampling with 100μm spatial resolution and sub-second temporal resolution at high recovery rates.

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Implantable electrochemical sensors enable fast and sensitive detection of analytes in biological tissue, but are hampered by bio-foulant attack and are unable to be recalibrated in-situ. Herein, an electrochemical sensor integrated into ultra-low flow (nL/min) silicon microfluidic channels for protection from foulants and in-situ calibration is demonstrated. The small footprint (5 μm radius channel cross-section) of the device allows its integration into implantable sampling probes for monitoring chemical concentrations in biological tissues.

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A silicon single-chip microfluidics system that integrates microscale fluidic channels, an analyte segmentation device, and a nozzle for electrohydrodynamic-assisted printing is designed for hyphenation with MALDI mass spectrometry (MS) imaging. A miniaturized T-junction segments analytes into monodisperse picoliter oil-isolated compartments. The printing nozzle deposits generated droplets one-by-one into an array on a conductive substrate without splitting or coalescing.

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Article Synopsis
  • Droplet microfluidics is a powerful tool in biomedical research, but detecting contents in very small droplets (picoliter volumes) poses challenges, especially with multiple analytes.
  • A new silicon-based microfluidic platform is introduced that allows for the multiplexed analysis of neurochemicals using nanoelectrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (nESI-MS), effectively handling the tiny droplet sizes.
  • The system achieves detection of various neurochemicals at incredibly low concentrations (attomole level), making it promising for label-free and small-volume monitoring of brain chemicals.
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We report a silicon microfluidic platform that enables monolithic integration of transparent micron-scale microfluidic channels, an on-chip segmentation of analyte flows into picoliter-volume droplets, and a nano-electrospray ionization emitter that enables spatial and temporal separation of oil and aqueous phases during electro-spray for subsequent mass spectrometry analysis.

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The electrolysis of water is of global importance to store renewable energy and the methodical design of next-generation oxygen evolution catalysts requires a greater understanding of the structural and electronic contributions that give rise to increased activities. Herein, we report a series of Ruddlesden-Popper LaSrNiFeO oxides that promote charge transfer via cross-gap hybridization to enhance electrocatalytic water splitting. Using selective substitution of lanthanum with strontium and nickel with iron to tune the extent to which transition metal and oxygen valence bands hybridize, we demonstrate remarkable catalytic activity of 10 mA cm at a 360 mV overpotential and mass activity of 1930 mA mg at 1.

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