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Browsing by Author "Jiang, Hongjie"
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Item Integrated sensing and delivery of oxygen for next-generation smart wound dressings(Springer Nature, 2020-05-18) Ochoa, Manuel; Rahimi, Rahim; Zhou, Jiawei; Jiang, Hongjie; Yoon, Chang Keun; Maddipatla, Dinesh; Narakathu, Binu Baby; Jain, Vaibhav; Oscai, Mark Michael; Morken, Thaddeus Joseph; Oliveira, Rebeca Hannah; Campana, Gonzalo L.; Cummings, Oscar W.; Zieger, Michael A.; Sood, Rajiv; Atashbar, Massood Z.; Ziaie, Babak; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of MedicineChronic wounds affect over 6.5 million Americans and are notoriously difficult to treat. Suboptimal oxygenation of the wound bed is one of the most critical and treatable wound management factors, but existing oxygenation systems do not enable concurrent measurement and delivery of oxygen in a convenient wearable platform. Thus, we developed a low-cost alternative for continuous O2 delivery and sensing comprising of an inexpensive, paper-based, biocompatible, flexible platform for locally generating and measuring oxygen in a wound region. The platform takes advantage of recent developments in the fabrication of flexible microsystems including the incorporation of paper as a substrate and the use of a scalable manufacturing technology, inkjet printing. Here, we demonstrate the functionality of the oxygenation patch, capable of increasing oxygen concentration in a gel substrate by 13% (5 ppm) in 1 h. The platform is able to sense oxygen in a range of 5–26 ppm. In vivo studies demonstrate the biocompatibility of the patch and its ability to double or triple the oxygen level in the wound bed to clinically relevant levels.Item Rapid prototyping of a novel and flexible paper based oxygen sensing patch via additive inkjet printing process(RSC, 2019) Maddipatla, Dinesh; Narakathu, Binu B.; Ochoa, Manuel; Rahimi, Rahim; Zhou, Jiawei; Yoon, Chang K.; Jiang, Hongjie; Al-Zubaidi, Hazim; Obare, Sherine O.; Zieger, Michael A.; Ziaie, Babak; Atashbar, Massood Z.; Surgery, School of MedicineA novel and flexible oxygen sensing patch was successfully developed for wearable, industrial, food packaging, pharmaceutical and biomedical applications using a cost-efficient and rapid prototypable additive inkjet print manufacturing process. An oxygen sensitive ink was formulated by dissolving ruthenium dye and ethyl cellulose polymer in ethanol in a 1 : 1 : 98 (w/w/w) ratio. The patch was fabricated by depositing the oxygen sensitive ink on a flexible parchment paper substrate using an inkjet printing process. A maximum absorbance from 430 nm to 480 nm and a fluorescence of 600 nm was observed for the oxygen sensitive ink. The capability of the oxygen sensitive patch was investigated by measuring the fluorescence quenching lifetime of the printed dye for varying oxygen concentration levels. A fluorescence lifetime decay (τ) from ≈4 μs to ≈1.9 μs was calculated for the printed oxygen sensor patch, for oxygen concentrations varying from ≈5 mg L−1 to ≈25 mg L−1. A sensitivity of 0.11 μs mg L−1 and a correlation coefficient of 0.9315 was measured for the printed patches. The results demonstrated the feasibility of employing an inkjet printing process for the rapid prototyping of flexible and moisture resistant oxygen sensitive patches which facilitates a non-invasive method for monitoring oxygen and its concentration levels.