6. Screen printing: In this, flexible substrates like paper, cloth, etc. can be used to
draw electrodes. Conductive ink is poured over the designed mask of the elec
trode. The obtained design on a substrate is dried in an oven. This is the most
simplistic approach. Figure 22.6a is the schematic of this approach.
7. Embossing: Herein, a mold with cavities for microchannels is made, a thermo
plastic polymer sheet is placed over this mold, and a specific temperature and
pressure are applied. The sheet melts and occupies the shape of a cavity. Cooling
and solidification give a sensor. Figure 22.6b is the schematic of this technique.
8. Laser-cut: In this, substrates like paper, glass, carbon, plastic, polymer sheets,
etc., are ablated by lasers like CO2, UV, pulsed, diode, etc., forming laser-induced
graphene electrodes and laser-cut microchannel patterns. Figure 22.6c shows the
image of a CO2 laser cutting the polyimide sheet.
9. Ink-jet printing: In this, an ink-jet printer is employed and a conductive ink is
filled in the nozzle of the printer and sensor electrodes are printed over substrates
like paper, glass, etc. Figure 22.6d shows the image of an ink-jet printer.
22.2 Printable and Flexible Biosensors’ Applications
22.2.1 Application in Health Management
Several printable and flexible biosensors have been fabricated for monitoring health and
diagnosis of ailments. These include the detection of specific disease biomarkers or pa
thogenic antigens in physiological samples. A few of the recent advances are discussed
here. For instance, a screen-printed biosensor was developed by Cao et al. Herein, a
paper-based 3D device was reported using a combination of screen printing and
FIGURE 22.5
Schematic representation of (a) injection molding, (b) replica molding, (c) photolithography, and (d) soft li
thography.
Printable and Flexible Biosensors
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