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MIT MechE Postdoctoral Associate Aditya Garg (left) and MechE Doctoral student Seleem Badawy stand behind the Raman microscope used to evaluate the Plasmosniff chip.
Photo Credits: Tony Pulsone
(CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: PlasmoSniff Breath Sensor
The Core Concept: PlasmoSniff is a portable, chip-scale diagnostic sensor designed to detect synthetic biomarkers from a patient's exhaled breath to quickly identify pneumonia and other lung conditions.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike traditional diagnostics that require time-consuming chest X-rays or bulky laboratory mass spectrometry equipment, this method utilizes inhalable nanoparticles. If a disease is present, specific enzymes cleave synthetic biomarkers from the nanoparticles. These detached biomarkers are exhaled, trapped by water molecules within a specialized gold-and-silica plasmonic chip, and identified in minutes using Raman spectroscopy.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Inhalable Nanoparticle Tags: Deliver synthetic biomarkers directly into the respiratory system.
- Enzymatic Cleavage: Disease-specific protease enzymes act as biological keys to detach the synthetic biomarkers from their carrier nanoparticles.
- Plasmonic Resonance Gap: A sensor core engineered with a thin gold film and a porous silica shell that captures target molecules and concentrates an electromagnetic field to amplify signal detection.
- Raman Spectroscopy: An optical technique that measures energy shifts in scattered light to identify the distinctive vibrational "fingerprint" of the exhaled biomarkers.


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