Research project

International-Commercialisation of droplet microfluidic based chemical sensors for rapid measurement of nutrients in water - NERC - Niu

Project overview

Traditionally chemicals in the aquatic environment (e.g. nitrate, phosphate) are measured by manual collection and laboratory analysis of discrete water samples. Microfluidic sensors offer an attractive alternative: by taking and analysing samples autonomously in the environment, they remove the need for manual sampling and allow real-time monitoring of water composition and quality. The current state-of-the-art sensors are not widespread due to a range of issues, most notably complicated fluidic control and their inefficient use of chemical reagent. This increases the size of the sensor and its power consumption, limits the frequency that measurements can be taken and duration the sensor can be deployed each time. Droplet microfluidics (in which nanolitre water samples are taken and subsequently operated on as droplets within an immiscible oil) is a novel microfluidic method that, in addition to other advantages, crucially offers higher analytical throughput and much more efficient use of consumables (reagent consumption being orders of magnitude lower). We have previously developed and demonstrated the first-ever droplet microfluidic sensor prototype for measuring nitrate and nitrite that uses drastically lower reagent consumption relative to the current state of the art. In this project we will mature the technology and demonstrate it in real-world operation in partnership with end users, including a UK public body and Chinese water company. These demonstrations will help us to refine the sensor, demonstrate its effectiveness, and ready it for commercial exploitation.

Staff

Lead researchers

Professor Xize Niu

Professor of Biosensing&Microengineering
Research interests
  • Microfluidics
  • Lab-on-a-chip
  • Sensors
Connect with Xize

Other researchers

Dr Adrian Nightingale

Associate Professor
Research interests
  • Microfluidics.
  • Sensors.
  • Analytical chemistry.
Connect with Adrian

Professor Hywel Morgan MBE

Professor of Bioelectronics
Research interests
  • Microfluidics
  • Bio-sensors
  • Lab-on-a-chip technologies
Connect with Hywel

Collaborating research institutes, centres and groups

Research outputs

Bingyuan Lu, James Lunn, Ken Yeung, Selva Dhandapani, Liam Carter, Tiina Roose, Liz Shaw, Adrian Nightingale & Xize Niu, 2024, Environmental Science & Technology, 58(6), 2956-2965
Type: article
Adrian Nightingale, Sammer-Ul Hassan, Kyriacos Makris, Wahida Taskin Bhuiyan, Terence Harvey & Xize Niu, 2020, RSC Advances, 10(51), 30975-30981
Type: article
Chi Leng Leong, Sharon Coleman, Adrian Nightingale, Sammer-Ul Hassan, David Voegeli, Martyn G. Boutelle & Xize Niu, 2019, Analytical Methods, 11(48), 6119-6123
Type: article
Adrian Nightingale, Sammer-Ul Hassan, Brett Warren, Kyriacos Makris, Gareth W.H. Evans, Evanthia Papadopoulou, Sharon Coleman & Xize Niu, 2019, Environmental Science & Technology, 53(16), 9677-9685
Type: article
Adrian Nightingale, Chi Leng Leong, Rachel Burnish, Sammer-Ul Hassan, Yu Zhang, Geraldine Clough, Martyn G. Boutelle, David Voegeli & Xize Niu, 2019, Nature Communications, 10
Type: article